Dual framestore: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Makers name forgotten}} Analogue vision mixers need all their sources to be genlocked - that is, the signals must all be synchronised - in order to work. In 2000, YSTV's ...")
 
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{{Makers name forgotten}}
{{unsure|Makers name forgotten}}


Analogue vision mixers need all their sources to be genlocked - that is, the signals must all be synchronised - in order to work. In 2000, YSTV's [[Panasonic F10]] cameras had genlock capability and so did the [Amiga], but everything else (VT machines, the [[Mac edit suite]], graphics computers, etc) needed to go through a framestore synchroniser. At that time, we had a single [[P164]] that could act as a framestore synchroniser, but this was rather limiting as it meant we could only handle one non-genlocked source at a time. [[Michael Prior-Jones]] bought a dual-channel framestore second-hand (found on the uk.tech.broadcast newsgroup, I think...) and this gave us the capability to handle three sources into the [[Cox T8]] vision mixer.
Analogue vision mixers need all their sources to be genlocked - that is, the signals must all be synchronised - in order to work. In 2000, YSTV's [[Panasonic F10]] cameras had genlock capability and so did the [Amiga], but everything else (VT machines, the [[Mac edit suite]], graphics computers, etc) needed to go through a framestore synchroniser. At that time, we had a single [[P164]] that could act as a framestore synchroniser, but this was rather limiting as it meant we could only handle one non-genlocked source at a time. [[Michael Prior-Jones]] bought a dual-channel framestore second-hand (found on the uk.tech.broadcast newsgroup, I think...) and this gave us the capability to handle three sources into the [[Cox T8]] vision mixer.
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The framestore also had a little remote control panel which could be used to do cuts and fades between the two channels, which led us to use it once or twice as a self-contained OB vision path. It became largely redundant with the coming of [[Magic DaVE]].
The framestore also had a little remote control panel which could be used to do cuts and fades between the two channels, which led us to use it once or twice as a self-contained OB vision path. It became largely redundant with the coming of [[Magic DaVE]].


{{does anyone know what happened to it}}
{{unsure|does anyone know what happened to it}}

Latest revision as of 16:19, 6 November 2017

Makers name forgottenUnverified or incomplete information

Analogue vision mixers need all their sources to be genlocked - that is, the signals must all be synchronised - in order to work. In 2000, YSTV's Panasonic F10 cameras had genlock capability and so did the [Amiga], but everything else (VT machines, the Mac edit suite, graphics computers, etc) needed to go through a framestore synchroniser. At that time, we had a single P164 that could act as a framestore synchroniser, but this was rather limiting as it meant we could only handle one non-genlocked source at a time. Michael Prior-Jones bought a dual-channel framestore second-hand (found on the uk.tech.broadcast newsgroup, I think...) and this gave us the capability to handle three sources into the Cox T8 vision mixer.

The framestore also had a little remote control panel which could be used to do cuts and fades between the two channels, which led us to use it once or twice as a self-contained OB vision path. It became largely redundant with the coming of Magic DaVE.

does anyone know what happened to itUnverified or incomplete information