In another thread a poster brought up something that over the past ten years or so I've noticed has become a thing with many 'Broadcast Engineer's' that involve responsibilities of the job:
During a prior gig, and even today, there were several very seasoned union engineers that worked for me. We had this annoying problem with slave clocks in one particular TV studio that would randomly 'glitch' for a second or two. It happened enough that the talent was frequently complaining. I had tasked at least three of my 'engineers' to fix the problem. After several weeks of asking them what the status of the troubleshooting was; one of the seasoned 'engineer's' said they had switched to the backup master clock system, which of course didn't fix the problem. Their next chosen step was to order-up a loaner master clock, then ship ours back to the factory for repairs. At that point, I'd had enough. I gathered the three of them to discuss what steps they'd taken to troubleshoot the problem. The answer was essentially; call the manufacturer for support, and look for failed equipment to ship back to the manufacturer. Of course to me, that doesn't count as troubleshooting. We then went then went through some simple assumptions: 'Would a problem with the building master clock system only effect one studio?' (Following blank stares of 'gulp-uh-oh').
Next I went to the tool storage area and pulled out a dusty oscilloscope. We walked down to the studio with the clock problem and I connected the oscilloscope to one of the prompter slave clock inputs. We waited about ten minutes watching a solid 10Mhz waveform on the scope until a off the screen square wave glitch at the same time the other clocks went to 8888. 'Gentlemen, we have an electrical-something near the SMPTE clock feed that when switching, is causing an inductive pulse into the time code wire'. My three engineers were staring at their shoes. Next I started tracing the cable path down the hall and found it laying against an electrical box that contained electrical contactor's used for starting air conditioning fans. Moved the cable away from the box, reconnected the oscilloscope, and no glitching clocks.
I didn't say it out loud, but in my head I was asking: 'What the Hell do we pay you guy's for??'
Still find myself asking the same sort of questions today: 'Did you download system logs to check for anything unusual during a particular time?' Did you get out a volt ohm meter to check for opens or shorts? Did you get out or download a schematic and confirm power supply voltages?
It seems to me it's time for some self-reflection: If you mainly rely on others to troubleshoot or repair the equipment in a facility, can you be considered an engineer? Or are have you become a shipping and receiving employee?
During a prior gig, and even today, there were several very seasoned union engineers that worked for me. We had this annoying problem with slave clocks in one particular TV studio that would randomly 'glitch' for a second or two. It happened enough that the talent was frequently complaining. I had tasked at least three of my 'engineers' to fix the problem. After several weeks of asking them what the status of the troubleshooting was; one of the seasoned 'engineer's' said they had switched to the backup master clock system, which of course didn't fix the problem. Their next chosen step was to order-up a loaner master clock, then ship ours back to the factory for repairs. At that point, I'd had enough. I gathered the three of them to discuss what steps they'd taken to troubleshoot the problem. The answer was essentially; call the manufacturer for support, and look for failed equipment to ship back to the manufacturer. Of course to me, that doesn't count as troubleshooting. We then went then went through some simple assumptions: 'Would a problem with the building master clock system only effect one studio?' (Following blank stares of 'gulp-uh-oh').
Next I went to the tool storage area and pulled out a dusty oscilloscope. We walked down to the studio with the clock problem and I connected the oscilloscope to one of the prompter slave clock inputs. We waited about ten minutes watching a solid 10Mhz waveform on the scope until a off the screen square wave glitch at the same time the other clocks went to 8888. 'Gentlemen, we have an electrical-something near the SMPTE clock feed that when switching, is causing an inductive pulse into the time code wire'. My three engineers were staring at their shoes. Next I started tracing the cable path down the hall and found it laying against an electrical box that contained electrical contactor's used for starting air conditioning fans. Moved the cable away from the box, reconnected the oscilloscope, and no glitching clocks.
I didn't say it out loud, but in my head I was asking: 'What the Hell do we pay you guy's for??'
Still find myself asking the same sort of questions today: 'Did you download system logs to check for anything unusual during a particular time?' Did you get out a volt ohm meter to check for opens or shorts? Did you get out or download a schematic and confirm power supply voltages?
It seems to me it's time for some self-reflection: If you mainly rely on others to troubleshoot or repair the equipment in a facility, can you be considered an engineer? Or are have you become a shipping and receiving employee?