But ya GOTTA have at least one or 2 sets of RCA inputs, especially in a newsroom for MD recorders(very handy for interviews) or if someone happens to bring in an old fashioned...hack, cassette spot that needs dubbed?Rob Stutson said:Dndsh237 said:???
What's so bad about RCA audio connectors and consumer gear in a broadcast studio? I know of installations that are using consumer gear and it works.
The increased amount of hum and susceptibility to RF are two bad things about unbalanced that I can think of right off the bat. And don't forget the durability factor (RCAs are MUCH less robust than XLRs) and the inherent lower audio quality of consumer gear (because it's built with the cheapest parts available) and that pretty much tells you why pro studios run ONLY balanced connections.
nightfly61 said:But ya GOTTA have at least one or 2 sets of RCA inputs, especially in a newsroom for MD recorders(very handy for interviews) or if someone happens to bring in an old fashioned...hack, cassette spot that needs dubbed?
Rob Stutson said:nightfly61 said:But ya GOTTA have at least one or 2 sets of RCA inputs, especially in a newsroom for MD recorders(very handy for interviews) or if someone happens to bring in an old fashioned...hack, cassette spot that needs dubbed?
Absolutely. Having a place to plug in an unbalanced unit or two is a given. As noted above you'd grab a Matchbox (or equivalent) to connect these units to your balanced systems.
But you COULD get a pre-owned Tascam 122 or a minidisc with balanced I/Os...![]()
CatFM said:Studio1 said:Dndsh237 said:???
What's so bad about RCA audio connectors and consumer gear in a broadcast studio? I know of installations that are using consumer gear and it works.
I hope you aren't serious? Why would a station spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on professional broadcast equipment if they could chuck a few domestic CD players into the back of a Numark DJ mixer and use that?
The simple answer to that question is that there are plenty of stations that do not have hundreds of thousands of dollars to spend on professional broadcast equipment. I saw several stations in the 90s, one of which was in a top 50 market, using a commercially marketed form of CD automation (I don't know which company marketed these) that consisted of a couple of racks outfitted with consumer grade Pioneer CD units. Somebody here may be familiar with those. They weren't real good, but they were affordable for stations with small budgets and they worked...most of the time.
Every station would love to be equipped with state of the art, balanced pro quality equipment, but few stations in smaller markets can budget it. I saw a number of stations using cheap consumer grade CD players in the 90s, some of which had the audio fed from the headphone output to the console. The impedence mismatch would scare most people, but the fact is that the average listener couldn't tell the difference between hearing music from one of those $100 consumer CD players and the music on a another station coming from a $1500 Denon CD Cart.
TomT said:It does, but it is easy to accidentally disconnect those extra ground wires when you move equipment to clean, etc. (Isn't it always the case, when you have everything pulled out and you are sucking up the dust bunnies, that you get an important phone call?).
Hmmm101 said:If you're looking for cost-effective but good quality (and will work very well in an AM RF field), call Dave Strode at Sandies. He picked up the old Dynamax line from LPB and they work great! I've installed 6 of these units and I'm very impressed with them. Solid steel construction, hot-swappable modular faders, remote starts, and 4 busses - 2 stereo, 2 mono. They are extremely simple to hook up and operate. No weird electronic logic controls, just mechanical switches. The faders are VCA controlled, so no scratchy pots. And repairs are fairly cheap compared to most of the other manufacturers. And it will accept balanced or unbalanced audio inputs.
http://www.sandies.com
Check it out.
Hmmm101 said:If you're looking for cost-effective but good quality (and will work very well in an AM RF field), call Dave Strode at Sandies. He picked up the old Dynamax line from LPB and they work great! I've installed 6 of these units and I'm very impressed with them. Solid steel construction, hot-swappable modular faders, remote starts, and 4 busses - 2 stereo, 2 mono. They are extremely simple to hook up and operate. No weird electronic logic controls, just mechanical switches. The faders are VCA controlled, so no scratchy pots. And repairs are fairly cheap compared to most of the other manufacturers. And it will accept balanced or unbalanced audio inputs.
http://www.sandies.com
Check it out.