PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Clyne Media
Tel: (615) 662-1616
Fax: (615) 662-1636
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
BBC Deploys LightViper™ for Innovative Television Coverage
of Falkland Islands Memorial Service
Annapolis Junction, MD, August 6, 2007 —
FiberPlex, Inc., the leading professional audio fiber optic supplier
to the sound production industry, has announced that their LightViper™
audio transport system was recently utilized by Britain’s BBC
Television. The BBC’s Outside Broadcasts group built a location
production room in a tractor shed at San Carlos on the Falkland Islands
last month to capture and link live pictures and sound for a Remembrance
Service which commemorated the 25th Anniversary of the British/Argentinian
armed conflict.
Live coverage from the Falkland’s service, attended
by veterans and currently-serving British soldiers, was sent via satellite
and simultaneously fed into live coverage of a corollary service taking
place at the Horse Guards venue in London’s Whitehall (governmental
offices district).
For the BBC’s senior sound supervisor, Tim Davies,
there were a number of important considerations since the crew would
be working in arduous conditions with limited electricity supply. High
on his list were reducing freight costs and equipment reliability.
As the hub for his signal chain, Davies chose a FiberPlex
LightViper, a lightweight fiber optic digital audio snake system supplied
by U.K. pro audio supplier, Kelsey Acoustics. The LightViper was configured
as a 32 x 8 system, enabling it to handle all the live and FX mic feeds,
sends and returns.
Davies explained, “We needed an easy system to operate
and wanted to save on rigging and man-power, not to mention truck space
and reduce the amount of multicores we used.”
However, the BBC Outside Broadcasts did use multicores
for signal distribution from the
LightViper system. Based in the farm’s tractor shed at the top
of a hill, the crew set up a communications system with San Carlos Military
Cemetery which was located 600 feet away. From there they ran the conventional
multicore audio snakes to the various points where the FX mics were
situated.
To put weight comparisons into perspective, the two 900
ft reels of fiber optic cables brought by the sound crew weighed approximately
50 lbs, including their transport reels. The copper multicore snakes
alone weighed a quarter of a ton (500 lbs).
“There were enormous advantages in using the LightViper
fiber system; with the mic amps being close to the mics there was no
danger of capacitance or loss of phantom power,” Davies observed.
The small stage box was easily concealed and provided a split output
with the four-core fiber cable carrying the sends and returns.
The audio feeds included speeches, a military band and
a choir.
Tim Davies continued, “We had 16 mics coming up
from the cemetery and we returned an IEM feed to the MD of the Royal
Marine Band — with a click track — so he could play in time.”
Davies’s crew were also taking a feed from London to the PA system,
as the production team cut between pictures of San Carlos Military Cemetery
in the Falklands to London footage from the Horse Guards, mixing in
stereo as the main memorial went out live on the U.K.’s BBC Two
television station.
As for power, the British MOD (Ministry Of Defence) were
able to provide the five-camera BBC crew and audio technicians with
a 50-amp Rapier missile generator. “The 4-meter satellite uplink
dish drew 40 amps of that, while the scanner truck, including two Yamaha
O1V’s and the vision mixer, pulled just 8!” Tim observed.
“We were 75 miles from the nearest habitation and
had traveled to the Falklands with just two and a half tons of equipment,
minimalist to say the least. But everything worked beautifully, despite
operating in the midst of a snow blizzard, with an incredible wind chill
factor.”
...ends 593 words
Photos Attached (2): Suggested captions
(Falksky.jpg): The Falkland Islands in mid-winter
June: the BBC’s audio crew is en route to the production location
in capital city, San Carlos, for a live TV broadcast/simulcast of a
25th Anniversary Falkland’s Memorial Service. (Falkgear.jpg)
The BBC’s Outside Broadcast team created an impromptu television
production room inside a tractor shed located 600 feet away from the
services at the Military Cemetery. Shown here is the 32 X 8 FiberPlex
LightViper system (in flight case under monitor screen) that was utilized
to minimize both manpower as well as shipping weight for the live TV
production’s audio facilities.
Editor’s Technical Notes:
Fiberplex manufactures the LightViper fiber optic audio cable transport
systems. The LightViper systems offer total signal path isolation between
both stage and mixer as well as between the mixer and power amplification;
the cable is totally immune to ground loops, RFI, EMI and electromechanical
noise, and runs of up to 1 1/4 miles (6,600 feet) can be easily accomplished
without signal loss or degradation. FiberPlex includes a limited lifetime
warranty with all of its LightViper system components.
Additional information can be obtained at www.fiberplex.com
or www.lightviper.com.
NOTE: LightViper™ is a registered trademark of FiberPlex,
Inc. Other company and product names may be trademarks of the respective
companies with which they are associated.
—For more information, contact Ron Neilson, Clyne Media, Inc.:
Tel: (615) 500-3261;
Email: ron@clynemedia.com; Web:
www.clynemedia.com