PTBoardOp94 said:
I've known stations to use DTMF tones from a telephone to automate sporting events. It can be done. The talent just has to know that if it does into OT, they can't take any more breaks.
Another possibility is using two closures. One fires the next event. The second kills will fire the game close and kill any content in between the current location and the close. This way, you could schedule like 3 minutes of PSAs or other filler content at the end of the game to allow more breaks if it runs long or into OT.
I've never used SS32, so I'm not sure if this is possible. If memory serves, AudioVault has this feature.
Dial-up remote control systems can work really well for this sort of thing.
When our LPFM first started out, we didn't have a studio to work from and were 100% automated from the transmitter site. For games, someone would drive up to the transmitter site and patch in a phone line by hand using a Telos hybrid. Everything had to stay live from the remote site until things were done...needless to say, this wasn't such a good arrangement.
I interfaced a DR-10 similar to what Chuck has to the automation computer using a Measurement Computing USB interface and hacked together a program to trigger macros on the computer from the contact closures on the DR-10. I installed a separate freeware cart player (CartMax) to fire the opens and closers and rotate the underwriting spots. This worked fairly well once I worked out all the bugs in my software and got it stable, and took care of someone having to drive to the TX site. I did find that the Circuitwerkes DTMF decoding wasn't 100% reliable.
Now that we have a studio and a Marti system, I made some changes to put the dial-up remote after the console feed but before the EAS, add capability to switch in the Marti receiver output, and changed to using Winamp to rotate the underwriting spots automatically. I also replaced the DR-10 with a Sine Systems DAI-1, which I've found to be much more flexible in programming and free of false DTMF tripping.
Our guys dial in for their sports remotes, enter a security code, and get program audio fed back through the phone. They can enter a DTMF code to tell the automation to stop the music after the current track. Once the music stops, they can press a button to fire the open cart, and then choose one button to put the POTS line on the air, or another to put the Marti receiver on the air. They also have a button that takes POTS/Marti audio off the air and starts the spots. The spots will rotate automatically until that button is pressed again to tell the system to stop after the currently playing spot. At the end of the broadcast, they can start the closer cart, and then restart the music, all from the phone keypad.
To do a live remote, we use the same buttons on the phone, we just swap out what's loaded in CartMax to replace the game open/close carts with a jingle to start the remote. Now that we have the studio though, we often just have one of the volunteer jocks come in and do a live shift and bring the Marti in via the board since that's more engaging than babysitting a sports remote.
We do have a delay board in our Sine Systems box. That does mean we have the 50ms delay on our POTS remotes (and of course more on cell remotes). However, Marti remotes don't have any delay.