PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Neilson/Clyne
Tel: (615) 662-1616
Fax: (615) 662-1636
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SeaWorld’s New Shamu Stadium
Makes High-Tech Splash
— Platt Design, a California-based entertainment design and systems
integration company,
deploys custom 32-channel, all-digital LightViper™ fiber optic
audio snake
in world-renowned entertainment venue —
INFOCOMM, ORLANDO, FL, June 7, 2006 — FiberPlex, Inc.,
the leading professional audio fiber optic supplier to the systems contracting
and integration industry, announced that its LightViper™ VIS-1832
fiber optic digital audio transport system has been deployed in San
Diego, CA’s recently expanded SeaWorld Shamu Stadium. The venue’s
5,500-seat outdoor stadium is the original home for the ubiquitous performing
killer whale shows that have spanned nearly five decades with three
generations of “Shamu” whales.
SeaWorld embarked on the most ambitious entertainment
project in the brand’s 42-year history with Believe — an
all-new show production that blends new killer whale behaviors with
elaborate set pieces, music, choreography and state-of-the-art multimedia.
The three Shamu Stadiums, home to the iconic Shamu the killer whale,
have a completely new look for the first time in 15 years. The new show
opened May 27 at SeaWorld San Diego, after two years in the making.
All three Busch Entertainment SeaWorld theme parks (San
Diego, San Antonio and Orlando) installed state-of-the-art, upgraded
video and audio systems to heighten guests’ experience. The Shamu
show’s sound is a mix of an original pre-recorded music score
combined with live, wireless headset microphone origination signals
from numerous trainer/performers. The enhanced audio systems are the
most sophisticated ever constructed by the firm.
At the center of the new Shamu Stadium’s stage,
a new stainless steel set includes four (4) 20-foot-wide video screens
that operate independently or can move together to create a single 80-foot-long
panoramic screen. Concert sound speaker line arrays from Meyer Labs
flank the large video screens to either side of the two-tiered stage.
180 feet from center stage the self-powered, weatherproofed stereo speaker
systems are fed the show’s audio from a Yamaha digital console
located at the rear of the stadium. Connecting the two is the acclaimed
LightViper 1832 fiber optic audio transport system.
The LightViper’s audio stage component is located
in an equipment rack directly behind the large LED screens. This audio
rack also contains the Meyer speaker systems processor, as well as a
CAT-5 network control interface. The LightViper stage box (which includes
the analog-to-digital converters) was custom-crafted from a special
stainless steel alloy by FiberPlex. Due to SeaWorld San Diego’s
harsh saltwater environment (a 7 million gallon fresh seawater pool),
corrosion resistance as well as total electrical signal isolation for
all A/V systems were a paramount design criteria in this unique venue.
For obvious safety reasons, no conventional copper electrical cables
of any kind were permitted in the pool performance areas for any of
the new A/V equipment.
The LightViper’s TAC-4 fiber optic audio cable runs
from the VIS-1832 stage box mounted in the onstage electronics rack,
encircles a portion of the stadium seating and terminates at the FOH
mix position. The audio console feeds analog return signals into the
VIM-1832 “mixer box” which are sent back to the LightViper
1832, out of the VIS-1832 returns and then on to the speaker processor
and the Meyer “MILO” system. The length of the fiber optic
audio cable run is approximately 350 feet. Video, intercom and network
control signal electronics are also deployed in separate fiber optic
cable runs.
Platt Designs designed the A/V systems and installed every
component of the sophisticated performance and control systems. The
Sierra Madre, California-based design firm’s principal, Bill Platt,
has an extensive background in live facilities A/V design. Platt’s
impressive experience includes a 15-year stint as head of design for
the Disney organization’s Creative Entertainment Group. His design
work included virtually all of Disney’s theme parks live entertainment
venues, from Tokyo to Paris.
Platt was clearly impressed with the performance of the
LightViper system, his first experience with the cutting-edge fiber
optic audio transport technology:
“The LightViper performs flawlessly; it’s completely transparent,
with absolutely no coloration. Initially, I was concerned about how
we’d achieve the stringent environmental design spec for the signal
transport systems — which was essentially: ‘build a big
concert sound system!’ — without using any conventional
copper cabling. [Ed: The Shamu performance stage floats above 7 million
gallons of seawater!] I knew the LightViper system would convert the
audio to light, but the mechanical components also had to meet a tough
spec. It was great news when Fiberplex said they would make a custom
stainless housing for this job. Their custom work was icing on the cake
and they turned it around very quickly too. The LightViper has been
very reliable. We simply couldn’t have done this job with a conventional
copper audio snake.”
...ends 735 words
Editor’s Technical Notes:
LightViper’s fiber optic cable offers 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, Neilson/Clyne, Inc.:
Tel: (615) 274-2263;
Fax: (615) 274-2595; Email: rneilson@neilsonclyne.com;
Web: www.neilsonclyne.com.