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Small Station Gets Big Results From Vinten
Radamec
February 25, 2010
Source: Vinten
Public Television broadcaster KSMQ of Austin,
Minnesota, one of the smallest PBS stations in the U.S., installed
a Vinten Radamec camera robotic system.

Several years ago the station planned an upgrade to its cameras,
and began to look deeper into its operation. At the
point when we were buying all this new equipment, we were
having a tough time finding volunteers, said station
producer/director John Wiedenheft. We didnt see
that changing in the near future, and the subject of robotics
came up. We wanted the option to possibly still run the cameras
in manual mode at certain times, and the only company who
could provide that was Vinten Radamec.
Vinten Radamec delivered a three-component
system to the station. An Autocam Multicontroller II Desktop
Control unit provides control of both the robotic pan and
tilt heads and native lens drives.
Three Radamec HS-105P robotic pan and tilt heads, designed
to mount on manual pedestals, provides pan and tilt function
in both robotic and manual mode. And three NLD-FED Autocam
native lens drives give full control of the Fujinon ENG digital
lenses mounted on cameras in the studio.
Robotic pedestals were not an option, said
Wiedenheft. We have too small a studio to even consider
that at that moment. The station bought a pair of Vinten
Pro-Ped Studio Pedestals for two teleprompter-equipped cameras,
and a Vinten Osprey Elite pedestal for the camera without
a prompter.
Engineer Stefan Olson said that the station
was 99-percent decided about the Vinten Radamec robotic system,
but in late 2008 a studio demo of the controller and a single
robotic head put them over the top. We liked it so much
that we purchased the rest of the system, and installed those
components on our own. It wasnt a tough installation,
just a few screws and a few guys lifting up the head to make
sure everything was secure. Installation is pretty self-explanatory.
To keep the cables all together, we
did a Techflex wrap with the robotic control cable and our
fiber cable for our camera, and looped a rope in with it to
make it more round, so it doesnt just slip on the ground,
said Olson. It actually gives it some girth so you dont
slip on it.
While KSMQ bought robotic heads that can
be operated manually, Wiedenheft estimated that 95 percent
of the time they opt for robotic operation. For most
of our productions, we use robotic cameras. Give us enough
time-- five, ten minutes before the production, and whoever
is running the robotic remote control will be able to set
up their pre-sets. We have about two or three people who are
really well trained on the remote control now, and so theyre
able to create a new shot list or find different camera angles
just like a regular camera operator would in a live program.
For live pledge, which as most people
know is very fundamental to a PBS station, we try to have
a camera operator behind at least one or two of the cameras,
just because in those live situations it can be a little unpredictable
sometimes, and you want the greater reaction speed you get
with a dedicated camera operator.
The operational efficiency of KSMQs
robotics allows the station to do five local productions a
week. Those programs benefit from the consistent quality the
robotics provide.
KSMQ president and CEO Marianne Potter said The Vinten
Radamec robotics system has been a great asset for our local
productions. The quality of service and product are unmatched.
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