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MULTIDYNE’S LiGHTBoX FIBER OPTIC FIELD TRANSPORT SYSTEM TAKES YONKERS RACEWAY HD VIDEO TO THE FINISH LINE

July 6th, 2010

YONKERS, N.Y., July 6, 2010 - From the second the horses storm out of the gate to the moment the lead contender gallops into the home turn, MultiDyne’s LiGHTBoX field fiber transport system delivers the thrill of the Yonkers Raceway to viewers, from a variety of vantage points. MultiDyne, a premier provider of fiber optic, video and audio transport and routing solutions for broadcast and pro A/V applications, has delivered two units of its award-winning LiGHTBoX to Yonkers Raceway, which employs the systems to transport video from cameras located in strategic spots on the racetrack and the entire complex. Read more…

Applications, Applications for Video Fiber Optic Transport, Fiber Optic Transport Systems for Broadcast Television, New Products, News, User Report , , , , , ,

Positive Feedback from MultiDyne Customer

October 6th, 2009

It is a Pleasure to Please Customers

 

Please find the quote below from a very satisfied MultiDyne customer.  Despite our explosive growth in the last few years, we still strongly value our customer relationships and do everything within our power to make every customer happy and find a solution to their difficulties. 

 

“I have been in this business for a little more than 30 years as an end user and a system integrator. I have never ever  had this level of customer service

and support as we been getting from Multidyne. I am personally floored, impressed and extremely grateful that we have been testing your products in

medical applications.

 

I thank all at Multidyne for going well over and above the call of duty.”  

 

Anonymous

 

“PS: out of 30 year this is only the second time I ever sent an email out like this. Dallas Engineers, if you are not using Multidyne, maybe you should

consider them… “

 

Please call the MultiDyne Team for immediate technical support and fiber optic design assistance.  Our sales engineers are available immediately to service all of your needs and requirements.

 

 

Toll Free US & Canada: 1-888-332-6779
International: +1-516-299-8293
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Jim Jachetta, MS EE
Senior Vice President, Principal
MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems
www.multidyne.com

 

 

Tech Talk with Jim Jachetta, User Report , , , , , , , , , , , ,

TV Technology User Report: MultiDyne Helps Casino Create Visual Oasis

September 9th, 2009

MultiDyne has had the privillege of working with some amazing clients, including the Peppermill Casino brand in Reno, Nevada. Below is their project manager Aaron Lines’ take on using the MultiDyne HD-1500 to create a visual oasis at the hotel properties.

This report was first published in TV Technology – http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/86544.

WENDOVER, NEV.
When you step into any of the Peppermill Casino’s gaming areas, either here or at our Reno, Nev. location, you’ll enter a fantasy world of stunning architecture, HD video and sizzling action. All of our properties place a major emphasis on creating the most exciting and luxurious atmosphere for our guests. That’s why, when I was tasked with complementing our casino design with a world-class video and entertainment system, I needed a video transport solution that could continue the standard of excellence we demand as a company.
When I began my planning for the project, there were only a few companies that had fiber systems for transferring HD video over the distance involved. After meeting with MultiDyne, they assured me that there was no challenge in distributing our 16 HD-SDI streams to all of our Wendover properties, as well as moving video from one side of our Reno property to the other.
During the selection and testing process, a critical concern was in avoiding degradation of our high-resolution video during transport. The HD-1500 certainly passed this and all of the tests. Our displays give guests the feeling that they have walked into a new visual oasis, heightening the feeling of excitement in our gaming areas.

Today, the HD-1500 system continues to serve as a crucial component in our highly proprietary and customized equipment configuration. It is used to transport both video and embedded audio. The HD-1500 works flawlessly and has been used 24 hours a day, seven days a week for two years now with absolutely no failures.

As this level of broadcast quality distribution is very unusual for a casino, it was important to work with a manufacturer who had solid experience in broadcast video, and also understood gaming facilities. MultiDyne’s very professional customer service and attention to our needs provided the comfort level needed to purchase these new products, and I’ve continued to rely on MultiDyne for these services over the years.

Broadband Cable Television Transport, Fiber Optic Transport Systems for Broadcast Television, Longer Distances, User Report , ,

MultiDyne Shoots and Scores For ActionCam’s Dynamic Productions

August 11th, 2009

HD-1500 Fiber Optic Link Used in ActionCam’s Final Four Debut; Upcoming HBO Production

 

LOCUST VALLEY, NY, AUGUST 11, 2009 – While ActionCam’s aerial camera made history flying over the Michigan State vs. University of Connecticut showdown during the CBS 2009 NCAA Final Four, a tiny fiber optic link provided by MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems was working overtime transmitting the broadcast’s HD-SDI and SDI TV signals. MultiDyne, a premier provider of fiber optic-based video and audio transport solutions for broadcast and pro A/V applications, supplied the company’s HD-1500 Fiber Optic Link incorporated into ActionCam’s aerial camera, ensuring seamless transmission during the Final Four broadcast.

 

“Getting an over-the-court shot for the first time in live broadcast basketball was a major component of our company’s national debut, and MultiDyne was a part of that,” says PJ Bennett, president and CEO of ActionCam, a next-generation aerial camera provider specializing in sports events, feature films, entertainment and commercials. “We’ve been using the MultiDyne HD-1500 link from day one, and it is a primary element of our aerial camera system. When we do an event like the Final Four for a major network, we have to get video routed from our camera to the production truck, and then to the network’s production truck. We go through a lot of chains, and MultiDyne’s HD-1500 fiber optic link allows us to send high-quality video, across long distances, on a singlemode fiber without any transmission or display errors. It works flawlessly.”

 

The MultiDyne HD-1500 is used in the camera head of the ActionCam aerial camera system to send video to the ActionCam production truck, supporting rates of 5 Mbps to 1.5 Gbps. Using singlemode operation, the link distance for the HD-1500 is up to 12.4 miles (20km) at 1.485Gbps. In addition, multiple MultiDyne HD-1500 units are used in the ActionCam production truck to route video to the network’s truck and then to the operator station. The HD-1500 is available in stand-alone and compact rack-mount configurations, simplifying installation in mobile production trucks and giving ActionCam the ability to rack six units using one rack. ActionCam’s full set-up of broadcast-quality HD camera equipment for aerial shots also includes a Panasonic HC 1500 camera and Fujinion HD lens. MultiDyne’s HD-1500 will also be used in future ActionCam projects, including the September 19 Floyd Mayweather “comeback” fight that will be filmed for HBO from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

 

“For a major national broadcast, high-quality, fully SMPTE compliant, fiber optic transport gear is the only way to go,” says Jim Jachetta, senior vice president of engineering and product development for MultiDyne. “Now more than ever there’s a demand for smaller solutions with the capability to transport HD video over longer distances, and the reclocked, jitter eliminating HD-1500 is designed to do just that. ActionCam’s overhead shot of the Final Four was truly groundbreaking, and we’re proud to have been a part of getting that killer shot for the viewers at home.”

 

For ActionCam, beyond selecting a fiber optic link with HD video capability, a key factor was cost efficiency. “One of the things we provide to the industry is a better aerial camera system at a better price, so we need to be focused on building our systems at the best cost we can,” says Bennett. “MultiDyne’s HD-1500 is a low-cost solution that fits our needs. What’s even better is that not only is the MultiDyne solution cost-effective, but it also provides looped inputs and dual outputs, so we can get our video routed without a separate router switch.”

 

The loop through input is equalized, re-clocked and buffered, and the solution also provides for dual re-clocked outputs. Several SMPTE standards are supported, including SMPTE 292M 1.485 Gbps, SMPTE 259M 270 Mbps, SMPTE 310M 19.4 Mbps, M2S or DBV-ASI 270 Mbps, SMPTE 344M 540 Mbps and SMPTE 305M SDTi rates.

 

About MultiDyne:

For more than 30 years, MultiDyne has been a leading provider of innovative and outstanding video and fiber optic-based transport systems for the broadcast, cable, satellite, production, digital cinema, pro A/V, corporate, retail, surveillance, teleconferencing, judicial arraignment, transportation, government, military, and healthcare markets. MultiDyne’s fiber optic transport systems for video, SDI, 3G HD, DVB/ASI, VGA, DVI, HDMI, audio, AES, Ethernet, data, CATV, as well as the company’s other broadcast accessories are used worldwide by such industry leaders as ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, RAI, BBC and the Department of Transportation. MultiDyne provides a seven-year warranty on its core product line. For more information, call MultiDyne at 1-877-MULTIDYNE or 1-516-671-7278, visit the company’s Web site at www.multidyne.com, or send an e-mail to sales@multidyne.com.

# # #

 

Media Contact:

Kate Lee

D. Pagan Communications, Inc.

631-659-2309, ext. 21
katel@dpagan.com

 

Company Contact:

+1 (516) 671-7278, Ex 302

marketing@multidyne.com

Applications, News, User Report , , , ,

IABM Members Speak 2 – Frank Jachetta

July 31st, 2009

Frank Jachetta of MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems

Frank Jachetta of MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems

Frank Jachetta – Senior VP of Sales and Operations
MultiDyne Video and Fiber Optic Systems

Frank, can you first fill us in on your background?

I hold a Bachelors degree in computer science and started in the industry as a circuit board designer and firmware developer. I have transitioned into a sales and operations position, but still enjoy being involved in product development.

What is the history of MultiDyne?

My father Vincent started MultiDyne in 1977 by building the first portable colour bar generator. MultiDyne then went on to create the first hand held signal generator. Our signal distribution background started with long-haul, cable equalizing DAs and has now evolved into a full line of fibre optic transport products.

What are the main product lines of MultiDyne?

MultiDyne comes from a broadcast background, but as convergence becomes a reality, many of our products carry over or focus on pro-AV, high end surveillance, intelligent traffic systems, military, government and simulation.

Our focus is high quality, point to point fibre optic transport. We can transport virtually any signal over fibre optic cable including composite, component and HDSDI video, high resolution graphics such as DVI dual link and RGB, AES and analogue audio, and much more.  Another product line is the field rugged, fibre optic transport working in conjunction with our tactical cable assemblies. In fact, the LiGHTBoX 1150 won two awards at IBC in 2008.

Which applications represent the current “sweet spot”?

I would have to say the optical router (EOS-4000) in conjunction with the DVI/RGB Fibre Link (DVI-6000).   When these two are installed in concert, it is no longer just a point to point device, we can distribute from one point to many points, such as multiple screens with the same content. Or, with a touch of the remote control, different images can be displayed on each of those same screens. DVI, DVI-DL, NTSC, PAL, RGB or YPbPr can be transported over the same link, so regardless of the source and destination signal requirements, one device can carry any of these signals. Audio also comes along for the ride and soon, USB!

Fibre optics is clearly a main component, how has this evolved in recent years?

With the advent of HDSDI and its tremendous proliferation, fibre has moved from being a luxury to becoming a necessity. Depending on cable types, HDSDI can only travel a few hundred feet over copper. This removes the option of copper from even a large room, not to mention a building, campus or metro area.

Does fibre compete favourably with copper?

Until it became a necessity, copper was more favourable due to fibre’s higher cost and fibre frailty. Fibre also had a stigma of being too difficult to terminate. However, with the increasing cost of copper, rugged tactical fibre and field termination kits, fibre has become more favourable than copper. In fact I was onsite for a railroad installation, standing in a tent on a windy winter day while the technician there terminated ST connectors onto fibre in a matter of seconds!

What future do you see for 3G transport?

Of course one day 3G will go the way of the VCR and vinyl records, but for now, the future of 3G transport is bright. The higher resolution 3G or 1080p HDTV is supported by many consumer displays and has proliferated into broadcast productions. 3G can be used to transport dual link HDSDI by multiplexing two 1.5G HDSDI streams into one 3G stream for digital cinema.  3G or HDTV 1080P is also used in sports and television productions. The 3G HD signal format is often used as the transport format of choice. Various types of signals are converted to and from the 3G format. This holds true for our DVI/RGB fibre link which converts DVI to 3G for transport or cross conversion. This way the 3G can pass through other 3G devices and routers easily, before it is converted back to DVI or simply left in its new 3G form.

How has the current business climate affected you?

I feel as an industry, even outside of fibre, we are all very blessed by the explosive growth of high resolution video content and the need to distribute it. With the mandates of changing over to HD, all the new video services that consumers have available and are willing to purchase and the proliferation of multimedia into all aspects of life, I am cautiously optimistic that our industry will not just weather these difficult times, but thrive.

Would you like to make a few predictions about the future of the media industry once the financial crisis is behind us?

Although the word convergence has become a cliché, I feel this is our future. When a single broadband conduit is brought to the home it will not just bring voice data and video, but will bring on demand services of very specialized content as easily as accessing a web site. When you can access various HD camera views at will, while watching baseball; when you can shop interactively, or take a real-time virtual walk through the summerhouse you are about to rent 3000 miles away, this is the future.

Current on demand and fibre to the home are a glimpse of what’s to come, but as the economy improves and the infrastructure is expanded, these services will quickly become reality. Of course, the broadband conduit to the home will be fibre.

Edition 71

2nd quarter 2009

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Follow MultiDyne on your favorite social network; Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and the MultiDyne Blog

June 12th, 2009
In order to maintain an open dialogue with our customers, value-added resellers and integrators, we have created portals on several of the popular social networks.  Now you may follow MultiDyne on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and the MultiDyne Blog.  Connect to MultiDyne and follow the latest company and industry news.  You’ll also find helpful application notes and educational materials. 

Click to follow us on Facebook

Click to follow us on twitter

Click to follow us on LinkedIn

Click to follow us on the MultiDyne Blog

For further details please find my contact information below:

Jim Jachetta
Sr. Vice President of Engineering & Product Development
MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems
Skype jim.jachetta
jimj@multidyne.com
www.multidyne.com 

Applications, News, Presentations, User Report , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

MultiDyne Receives Large Contract for 3G HD-SDI Fiber Transport

May 14th, 2009
Las Vegas City Center Project uses MultiDyne HD-3000 3G HD-SDI Fiber Optic Links and EOS-4000 Fiber Optic Routing Switchers

Las Vegas City Center Project to use MultiDyne HD-3000 3G HD-SDI Fiber Optic Links and EOS-4000 Fiber Optic Routing Switchers

Locust Valley, NY – MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems, a leading provider of fiber optic equipment for the transport of video and audio for broadcast & pro A/V applications, announced today receipt of an order for a large quantity of the industry leading 3G HD-SDI fiber optic transport units, plus a number of its EOS fiber optic switchers. The initial orders exceed $1 million for products enabling conversion of 3Gb video signals to an optical mode for transport over single mode fiber.

MultiDyne developed the HD-3000 Multi-rate 3G HD-SDI fiber optic transport product in anticipation of state of the art customers requiring 1080p resolution, and a future proof video position. MultiDyne received the orders through two well known System Integrators for application in one the world’s most renowned hotel and casino establishments.

“We are thrilled to have received this contract award for leading edge technology in such a prestigious and visible application,” said Bob McAlpine, vice president of global sales and business development. “Our HD-3000 fiber transport products are evolutionary, ideally suited to handle this major 3Gb requirement. In addition, the EOS-4000 Series fiber optic switcher provides MSA compliance and pathological performance for 3Gb video signals,” added Jim Jachetta, Senior Vice President of Engineering & Product Development for MultiDyne.

About MultiDyne:
MultiDyne provides fiber optic
transport systems for video, audio, SDI, HD-SDI, 3G HD-SDI, AES, Ethernet, data, PTZ, RGB/VGA, DVI, HDMI, and CATV; optical multiplexing, CWDM; automatic protection switching; loss detectors with automatic switchover; test signal and character ID generators; video, audio and digital distribution amplifiers; cable equalizers; automatic gain AGCs; electrical and fiber optic routing switchers; tactical cable assemblies; XLR adapter panels as well as other television accessories. MultiDyne has been serving the broadcast, cable, satellite, production, digital cinema, pro AV, corporate, retail, surveillance, teleconferencing, judicial arraignment, transportation, government and healthcare sectors for over 30 years. For more information, call MultiDyne at 1-800-488-8378 or 1-516-671-7278, visit our Web site at www.multidyne.com, or send an email to sales@multidyne.com.


All products mentioned herein are trademarked property of their respective owners.

####

New Products, News, User Report , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

KTNV’s Ethernet Eye in the Sky with MultiDyne

April 3rd, 2009

Vegas broadcaster upgrades Stratosphere fiber link

by Craig Johnston

April 15, 2009 • TV Technology • www.tvtechnology.com Page 10
 
LAS VEGAS – The Stratosphere observation tower is one of Las Vegas’ signa­ture landmarks, with its restau­rants and high altitude thrill rides. At 1,149 feet, the tower, which is the tallest free-standing observation tower in the United States, also serves as camera platform and microwave receive site for local television sta­tions.
 
KTNV the local ABC affiliate, and owned by Journal Broadcast Group of Milwaukee, Wis., has long had an analog camera and microwave receiveratop the structure, with a single-mode fiber link to its studios several miles away. To get more utility out of the fiber link as part of its BAS upgrade to a new MRC Central Receiver, the sta­tion installed a MultiDyne CWDM (Coarse Wave-Division Multiplexer) 2000 system.
 
“MultiDyne offers Journal cost effective and reliable ways to transmit multiple signal types over a single fiber link,” said Ron Adair, director of television engineering for the Journal Broadcast Group. “That enables us to have Ethernet control of the system without the need of separate phone lines.”
 
MULTIPLE WAVELENGTHS
MultiDyne’s CWDM system uses advances in laser and thin film tech­nology that have made it economically possible to provide up to 18 different wavelengths on a single fiber, separating them by 20nm. “The CWDM­2000 is basically a passive device,” said Bob McAlpine, MultiDyne vice president of Global Sales & BusinessDevelopment in Locust Valley, N.Y. “It is set up to multiplex many different wavelengths of light into a single fiberpath. The criterion for the design was to provide the correct signal functional­ity over the existing single fiber line.”
 
The station chose an eight channel CWDM-2000-8 for the job, which provides them with three spare chan­nels. The CWDM-2000 is available config­ured for 4, 8, 12, 16 and 18 wave­lengths, and with a pair of de-mul­tiplexers, it could support 18 chan­nels in each direction.
 
“There’s essen­tially four links going through this fiber,” said Scott Michaels, customer service manager for systems integrator Heartland Video Services of Plymouth, Wis., which designed and installed the MultiDyne system for the station. “We’re multi­plexing Ethernet capability between the studio and their site up there, we’re multiplexing analog video and audio from the existing camera, and then we’re taking back ASI from that central receive site.”~

 


FUTURE PROOFED
Michaels gives high marks to the flexibility of MultiDyne’s modular design. “One of the beauties of MultiDyne is that it’s got a bunch of modules, and you can mix and match those to meet your specific require­ments. So we were able to get Ethernet, analog video and audio, ASI, and leading edge 3-Gig HD-SDI fiber transport.”

Where previously control of the receive site and camera was via four
wire modem communication, and the video and audio path were limited, control is now handled via Ethernet. MultiDyne EM316SW-XY transceiversare installed at both the Stratosphere and studio ends.

An HD-3000 transmitter on the tower and receiver module at the stu­dios will allow KTNV to install a high definition camera at its Stratosphere location, and is future-proofed to 3 GHz when there’s need to deliver 1080/60p video.

A DTV-120 transmitter at the towerand receiver at the station are used to carry the ASI signal from the MRC central receiver back to the studios, and a DVM-2000 transmitter and receiver are used for the analog videoand audio from the current camera onthe tower. In all, the installation occu­pies five rack units of space.

Prior to shipping the equipment, MultiDyne engineers configure the CWDM-2000 units to the specified laser wavelengths. Since some users are accessing dark fiber and have no idea whether it is of the single-or multi-mode type, the CWDM units can be set up to handle either of them.

A coarse wavelength-division mul­tiplex system uses uncooled lasers, which are relatively inexpensive com­pared with the cooled lasers necessary for DWDM (dense wavelength divi­sion multiplexing). The DWDM sys­tems require such temperature control because individual wavelength chan­nels are set only 3nm apart, which allows them to pass over 100 wave­length channels over a single fiber optic path.  

The Stratosphere is the tallest free standing observation tower in the United States and home to microwave operations for Las Vegas stations.

Applications, News, User Report , , , , , ,

The National Hockey League Chooses MultiDyne HD-SDI Fiber

April 2nd, 2009

 

NHL HD Goal Camera fed to MultiDyne HD-1500 HD-SDI Fiber Optic Link

NHL HD Goal Camera fed to MultiDyne HD-1500 HD-SDI Fiber Optic Link

 

 

 

MultiDyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems announced today that the MultiDyne HD-1500 was selected by Applied Electronics Ltd (AEL) and The National Hockey League (NHL) for the High Definition Goal Video Replay System.  The system was designed and installed by AEL.  Frank Jachetta of MultiDyne worked closely with Eugene McEleney of AEL and Jim Wilkes of the NHL.

 

 

 

 

 

Applied Electronics is a MultiDyne Valued-added Reseller and Systems Integrator based in Mississauga, Canada.

The system has been installed in all 30 NHL arenas in the United States and Canada.  Each venue has two HD-SDI cameras positioned over each goal. The HD-SDI signal is transported via Singlemode fiber to the Video Replay Judges and the Mobile Production Trucks outside.  A total of 60 HD-1500-FTX-ST HD-SDI Fiber Optic Transmitters and 120 HD-1500-FRX-ST HD-SDI Fiber Optic Receivers were installed for all 30 venues.  A 1 by 2 optical splitter was used to split the transmitted optical signal to the two destinations.

 

 

 

“The application required the transport of HD signals over longer distances, with mission critical reliability.” said Frank Jachetta, Senior Vice President, Sales & Operations. “An economical system with a small footprint was a key requirement.”

The HD-1500 line provides an economical solution for the fiber optic transport and distribution of virtually any digital signal from 5 Mbps to 1.5Gbps up to 24Km over Singlemode fiber.  The supported standards include SMPTE 292M 1.485 Gbps, SMPTE 259M with operation from 143Mbps – 360Mbps, SMPTE 310M 19.4Mbps, M2S or DVB-ASI 270Mbps, SMPTE 344M 540Mbps and SMPTE 305M SDTi rates.  The systems will also transparently pass any embedded audio and data.

The HD-1500 Series of products are available in compact stand-alone and rack-mount packages making them ideal for applications including field remotes, sporting events, ENG/SNG, production and in-plant signal distribution.  The power requirements are 110 and 220 VAC with a wall-mount power supply or 5 to 16 VDC with an external battery. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photos:           

www.multidyne.com/images-new/HD1500-FRT-NEW.jpg

 

 

 

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MultiDyne has been serving the broadcast, cable, satellite, production, digital cinema, pro-AV, corporate, retail, surveillance, teleconferencing, judicial arraignment, transportation, government and healthcare sectors for over 30 years.   MultiDyne  provides fiber optic transport systems for video, audio, SDI, HD-SDI, AES, ethernet, data, PTZ, RGB/VGA, DVI, HDMI, L-Band, IF and CATV; optical multiplexing, CWDM; automatic protection switching; loss detectors with automatic switchover; test signal and character ID generators; video, audio and digital distribution amplifiers; cable equalizers; automatic gain AGC’s; electrical and fiber optic routing switchers; tactical cable assemblies; XLR adapter panels as well as other television accessories.  For more information, and sales, call MultiDyne at 1-(800)-488-8378, or 1-(516)-671-7278.  Visit our Web Site at www.multidyne.com or send E-Mail to sales@multidyne.com.

Applications, User Report , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Total RF sees the LiGHT with MultiDyne

March 11th, 2009

By Kurt G. Heitmann
President Total RF Productions
SVP Sales CP Communications and Total RF

The truck was purpose-designed from the get-go, and as a result is ideally suited for small regional productions such as local college sporting events, smaller corporate meetings, live performances, side-by-side productions and regional sport pickup.

LACKED BUILT-IN FIBER INTERFACE

One of the pieces of equipment we selected in the planning process for the truck was JVC’s GY-HD250 high-definition camcorder. We liked this particular model as it’s relatively inexpensive, yet produces very high quality video. However, the GY-HD250 does not have its own built-in fiber optic transport system. If we deployed it as received, this would have resulted in a somewhat limited range for transporting the camera’s video back to the Dotcom truck.

Also, at a lot of events, even if multicore copper cables had the video signal reach we needed, they’re just too constraining. At such productions as the Ultimate Fighting Championship and the X Games, we may have as many as five cameras shooting simultaneously throughout the venues and didn’t even want to think about hauling around that much multicore. Fiber was the only solution to getting the sort of versatility and flexibility that we’d planned for the truck. This is where our quest for the perfect fiber solution began.

Actually, it wasn’t much of a quest at all. The folks at MultiDyne had worked with us before on several special projects and had a reputation for delivering high quality video and for working with their customers to make sure that they got exactly what they wanted. One call was all it took.

LIGHTBOX SOLUTION

When we made that call, we learned that MultiDyne had just launched a new product—the Lightbox, a battery-powered, bidirectional field fiber transport system for SD and HD video, audio and data signals.

In addition to extending the video reach of the JVC GY-HD250’s multicore cable tether, we also had some special needs. It wasn’t long before we got together for a few engineering planning sessions with MultiDyne and set forth our requirements. It wasn’t that long before the company had created a Lightbox system that not only did everything that we needed, but also one that fit within our budget.

The MultiDyne Lightbox has proven to be both cost effective and a reliable team player. These attributes have allowed us to both provide excellent quality video and to pass the savings on to our clients.

The unit has really come through for us in a big way. The Lightbox has already saved us a lot of time and effort in setting up for field production.

MultiDyne’s standard Lightbox is already very versatile, but with the added features we asked for and received, it just really doesn’t get much better. We think that we are very lucky to find a company that would go the extra mile to customize their product for our needs.

Kurt Heitmann has been an entertainment sound engineer since 1981, winning three Emmy Awards in the process. Kurt is now the president of Total RF Productions and the senior vice president of sales and marketing for both Total RF and CP Communications. He may be contacted at kurt@cpcomms.com

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