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HARMAN’s Studer Consoles Specified for Olympics Transmission

BBC sound supervisors Gary Clarke (left) and Pete Bridges with the Studer consoles in Potters Bar, UK.

HARMAN announces that the BBC will broadcast the London 2012 Olympic Games from the specially built International Broadcast Centre (IBC) in the Olympic Park, using seven HARMAN Studer Vista and OnAir consoles, along with a Route 6000 network core. This will enable the BBC to take feeds from 34 participating Olympic Games venues for domestic transmission through its network.

Following a promise to broadcast “every session of every sport every day,” this will amount to some 2,500 hours of TV sports coverage. BBC Sport will field 20 IBC sound technicians, managed by Jon Sweeney, Technical Operations Manager and Richard Morgan, Chief Engineer.

Andrew Hills, Director Product Strategy, Studer, says that the integration of the desks would be carried out by Dega Broadcast Systems, at the same time extending Studer’s relationship with the UK’s state broadcaster that dates back more than a decade.

Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) will provide host facilities within the IBC’s space; the design of the BBC space has been a collaborative effort between the broadcaster and Dega, led by project coordinator John Cleaver.

The installation will see the deployment of three 62-fader Vista 9 consoles and a Vista 5 along with three OnAir consoles, comprising two OnAir 3000 consoles and an OnAir 1500. Incoming feeds from the host broadcaster and the BBC’s own studios will be fed to the desks, with the Route 6000 linking all the consoles at the core.

According to Lead Sound Supervisor Pete Bridges, a Vista 9 will form the hub of each of the broadcaster’s three HD and 5.1 production galleries. In addition, an interactive gallery (IPCR) will manage and route 24 separate streams whose destination will be the Internet, Red Button, and other platforms including Freesat, Sky and Virgin Media; these will run in stereo using two OnAir 3000s.

Faced with taking the bundle of host broadcaster’s feeds and folding that into its own programming will involve combining the broadcaster’s own presenters with VT, and incoming HD-SDI video feeds and Outside Source (OS) lines. The OnAir 1500 will provide a microphone submix from the athletics stadium presentation.

The specially built International Broadcast Centre (IBC) in the Olympic Park hosts seven HARMAN Studer Vista and OnAir consoles,

In using the Vista 9 for the first time, Bridges notes that the metering will allow fast reconfiguration when dealing with a wide variety of incoming 5.1 OS lines along with commentary and 24 microphone circuits from the studio via Studer’s D21m stage boxes. Other sources to the Vista 9 will include VT and grams. The Vista 9 in the main gallery will provide 16 line inputs, 72 line outputs, and 52 mic inputs (via RELINK sharing) with 112 AES inputs and outputs; the large number of ports result from the number incoming 5.1 sources.

Situated in its own room, the Vista 5 will be used as a backup gallery to the main sound control rooms (SCRs), and will serve as a bypass source, should the main studio suddenly need to be put into bypass to allow a pre-record to take place. “We will use the Vista 5 to pick up the mix, freeing up the Vista 9s to mix the pre-record,” says Bridges, adding that the Vista 9 offers the ability to upmix stereo sources to 5.1 and downmix 5.1 to stereo outputs.

The Route 6000 itself (which can accommodate up to 1,728×1,728 inputs and outputs) will provide 40 line inputs; 40 line outputs; four microphone inputs and two HD-SDI de-embedder/embedder cards.

Finally, use of the Studer RELINK I/O sharing resource will enable the technicians to share mic circuits between all the control desks. “This is a key benefit,” Bridges says. “We can have HD tie lines between the cores of each desk on CAT5, using Studer’s High Density data stream…with 96 bi-directional tie lines to each of the four Vista consoles, sharing the desks’ sources and outputs.”

“One of the realities of an event of this scale is that you are looking at building an entire broadcast centre, not just an OB,” Cleaver says. “Our area of expertise is permanent installs and this is as big an installation as we would undertake anywhere. To do so in a temporary building, for use over a 3-week period, and make it work for the number of people who are going to be using it, was certainly challenging. Since this is our domestic Games it needs to be covered more comprehensively; the fact that we have built three full galleries, and provided interaction between them so that the three Vista 9 consoles link and route to each other to allow them to control any of the galleries, is a huge plus for what these mixers do. Without a doubt, this ability at the front end is something the broadcaster had wanted.”

Visit Studer at usa.studer.ch.

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