A new, low-cost modular production unit that can be used as a flyaway or be quickly fitted in a van has been unveiled by Datavideo. The MS-3000 Portable Production Unit will cost from about £12,000-13,000 for a full, turnkey system.
It sold the first one at BVE for live events production with
eight cameras, and the system will be available as a completely customisable
package, including free fitting of equipment a buyer already has, according to
Allan Leonhardsen (pictured), sales and marketing director of Holdan, the
Datavideo distributor, which will assemble the unit at its UK facility.
The PPU is based around the SE-3000 8- or 16-channel 2M/E
broadcast vision mixer (which costs from about £9,000 and has two mix/effects
channels, full 3D effects, transitions, picture-in-picture and sophisticated
keying, including chromakey effects), and will almost certainly include
talkback, hard disk recorders, vectorscope and waveform monitors, and power
distribution sensors.
It is designed to be easy to install in a small van or
temporary studio. As a single cased unit, running on caster wheels, it can be
rolled in to place to provide instant television and AV facilities.
“We want it to be that you turn up, plug it in, and be live
in seconds,” explained Leonhardsen. “We’re not using systems like embedded
computers that take a long time to boot up. We want to make sure that if you
lose power, you are back on line in five to ten seconds, maximum. It’s very
much aimed at the live market, or anyone who wants stability.”
Holdan hopes to create set configurations, to make it easy
for customers to specify and check price points, and talked to prospective
users at BVE to find out what they’d need in such a package (one item being
coffee cup holders – so users are less likely to spill drinks on it), but he
expects that almost everyone will want to choose their own configuration. As it
will be created from a kit of modules, it will be possible to keep prices low
despite the customisation.
“We can create integrated solutions but we don’t believe in
it,” he added. “We don’t want it to happen that one item goes down and the
whole system goes down, which is why we are using independent modules. We
believe in stability and non-embedded functionality, so that independent items
do independent jobs. If a hard disk recorder goes down, you can simply replace
it rather than sending the whole thing back.”
Although Datavideo manufactures all the items, customers
won’t have to specify them and can have a unit from another manufacturer fitted
instead.
At BVE it showed a flyaway-style configuration with two
17-inch LED HD monitors, the SE-3000 switcher, dual-screen vectorscope test
devices, a 16-way intercom, audio mixer and hard disk recorders. Units for live
encoding, real-time graphics or additional media playout facilities can simply
be inserted into the rack enclosure. Power for the PPU is supplied by a
Datavideo central distribution system, which operates from 110-260v. This can
have power outlets on the back for the cameras, tally, talkback and prompter
(through a single multicore cable), and can be fitted with up to three
redundant power supplies.
For use in a van, it has a system that clicks into the
normal seating rail system, so that a people carrier can be turned into an OB
van (and back) in about ten minutes – it has already used this system for a few
vans in Europe and the Far East, which Leonhardsen sees as being ideal where an
OB van is only needed occasionally, or to allow the system to be moved between
studio and OB use.
Holdan has put up a video of the Datavideo equipment, in the Mercedes Sprinter van shown at BVE (and seen in the background of the first photo), giving more details on its benefits and how it works.
Holdan has put up a video of the Datavideo equipment, in the Mercedes Sprinter van shown at BVE (and seen in the background of the first photo), giving more details on its benefits and how it works.
Studio in a briefcase
Also new at BVE was the Datavideo HS-2800 portable
integrated production studio (pictured). The briefcase-style HD production switcher can be
up and running on location in a matter of minutes, and has eight digital
inputs, a built-in multi-view video monitor and 10-bit video support.
It supports multi-camera shoots, blending video sources,
audio feeds, logos and graphics, and is designed for small-scale live
production, or AV use for events or corporate production.
“With HD-SD conversion, downstream keying and dual picture-in-picture
functionality, producers can deliver very polished TV for multiple audiences,”
said Leonhardsen.
Features include high-quality digital video effects,
multiple XLR inputs, a 17.3-inch monitor to display input sources, programme
preview and the live programme, and an eight-way intercom system complete with
headsets and tally lights.
By David Fox
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