Archive

Posts Tagged ‘microphone processor’

Mic Processing Move: Welcome the Symetrix Radius 12×8

October 11, 2023 2 comments

A few months back I mentioned we have moved some of our microphone processing from the Aphex Channel to a Symetrix Radius 12×8. I appreciate the patience you all exhibited while I juggled work, site migration, and whatever else life threw at me to finally get this, I should say these, posts rolling. Yes, these, as it will be best to provide you with a 3 or 4 post series on this migration from one manufacturer and technology to another. This first installment will give you the why and how the decision was made. After this comes the technical details and the meat that makes doing these things so much fun. Time to get things started with the “why” and WTF!

A reminder as it has been a while; since Rode purchased Aphex, support for the hardware has been poor, and quality control has gone downhill, too. This is the driving factor for moving on. I had a set of criteria before even looking at alternatives to the Aphex Channel. First a mic processing channel for me MUST have a noise gate, or some expander/gate. I did not want to budge on this one, nor have any demo unit passed this test. The second criteria was the unit required an AES, digital, output. I had to relax this requirement, though the Symetrix does give me an option. More on that in another installment. One must always be willing to compromise when faced with minimal alternatives.

How did I find this unit? Research. Lots of research. As we started to see more power supply failures on the Aphex units, pressure increased to find alternatives. The gate situation was becoming a sticking point. As Symetrix used to make a fine voice processor in the 528E, I poked into their website, here, and found a whole new world of devices. All are DSP based. I downloaded the software, Composer, used to configure these units. I learned a bit more. I contacted my preferred equipment vendor, Broadcasters General Store(name drop), and we started the inquiry process. It was slow to start, but once I was able to chat with a human at Symetrix, the details started to become clear. I was intrigued. Why not DSP? As I was having no luck with stand-alone units, I requested a demo. I originally asked for a Symetrix Prism, but a Radius 12×8 was available, so I went that route.

The hardware is deceptive and intimidating if you are expecting knobs, menus, meters, etc. As the picture shows, the hardware is just that, a chassis with some guts, and the guts need to be told what to do. I am glad I at least poked at the Composer software prior to having the physical unit here. I then had a great conversation with Stu at Symetrix. The chat gave me the necessary areas to focus on and details on what my end goals were. The Radius comes with analog and USB I/O be default, and the flavors are 4×4 and 12×8. I have the 12×8 because I have rooms with 5 to 6 mics. In addition, one can purchase the digital output module and/or a Dante module if you wish to go AoIP. I am considering adding the Dante module to a unit, the why to be discussed in a later installment. The digital output only gives 4 channels, so for a 5 to 6 mic room it is best to stay with analog.

After a few weeks of learning and playing with the Composer software, I had a multi-mic processor in a production studio for real use evaluation. Setting this up does take some learning, and the bottom line is it is a “process”. You start with a site. You add the hardware component, in this case a Radius 12×8. You then create a design which is the guts. I learned about super-modules. I learned the different filters and dynamics that are available. I ignored the items in the toolkit which refer to conferencing, control surfaces, and mixers. Yes, you may say overkill for just a processor, but as you will see in the next installment, the fine tuning and tweaking flexibility does pay off. When all was tested in the production room, I had a concept mic channel with the desired stages ready for on air. I will admit when I purchased our second unit I changed a couple items in the chain which seems to have improved on my original concept. I now have a mic channel strip copied to 8, so each mic is able to be configured individually, and using SymView, I do not need to be connected to Composer for minor tweaks. My DSP channel is basic in terms of the basics: after the input where levels are set, I have the high-pass filter, compressor, de-esser, expander/gate, and EQ as one would expect from a stand-alone processor.

The Symetrix Radius has been on the air now for a few months, and I have received positive feedback. I learned the Radius comes with a better mic pre-amp than the Prism, so that factored into the decision. The unit provides phantom power as I use Neumann BCM-104 microphones. Did it take time to learn? Yes. Is it the same as an Aphex Channel? No. Does it sound clean? Yes. Other factors that were a concern was how well the DSP compressor works, how to deal with make-up gain, and latency through the unit. The former concerns are minor as we know how to make the appropriate adjustments. The latter was a bit more concerning, but once on air, it is not. It depends on how you build your stages and how much DSP is being used. The next installment will describe how I used Composer and built the stages, with screenshots, as an example of what the learning curve involves. I must say I like the flexibility, and DSP can be your friend.

Summary of Life

July 1, 2011 Comments off

Oh there is so much to write about.  I’ve been on vacation, and now back this week to much to do.  Twitter has been good for updates.  I sure would like to drill down and give you guys some substance, but here we are summarizing the fun we have had this week.

HVAC.  Finally, after 6 or so years, we have air conditioning at our Class A transmitter site.  The R2D2 type units just were not cutting it and when I had the vendor out to get the quote, one of the units would not stay on.  Now that the new unit is in, the room is consistent and hopefully will be much cleaner as it is a closed system.  We had a Fujitsu 2.5 ton split system installed.  It is quiet; almost too quiet.  The residence at the house will appreciate that.  It is rated at 19 SEARS, so it is efficient.  Let’s see how efficient over time.  Check that off the list.

I received my RF load for a station that had one under-sized since the HD installation.  That needs to go.  The thing showed up the day before I left on vacation.  I will squeeze that in shortly.  Should be straight forward.  Of course I plan on making the project a bit more complicated as the RF coax switch on that station needs to be rotated 90 degrees as the interlocks do not line up properly with the controller, position-wise.  Now that will be fun.  Drop switch, rotate it, and make plumb again.

New Avaya phone system was installed.  Some minor adjustments are required, but we had the first phones up and running 1 hour after the old system was turned off.  We’re good.  I congratulate the IT dude on his planning and the folks at GSolutionz for providing a good installation experience.  Can’t wait to play with the new features.  I do have one thing we are attempting to solve:  Connecting the system to the Telos 2101.  I have Green, but I do not have the numbers and the two systems are not quite talking with each other.  I’m waiting for a call from Telos now (been 2 hours already) on the error codes that are showing so I can get the techs to adjust the Avaya to provide what Telos needs.  Anyone else connect a phones system to the Telos?  Any luck, trouble, solutions?

I continue to find the time to run tests and evaluate the Orban 8600.  Stay tuned for a user report somewhere.  Hint:  I like it.  Now will Omnia step up and let me dig on that one?

I continue to rotate 6 year old Aphex 230 processors through as they fail.  All the same vintage and all getting capacitors replaced.  I am still not told which ones, but at least I know they get recalibrated when sent in for service.  Believe it or not, one unit had a tube replaced.  I need to dig up the type and get a couple replacements in house.  My oldest is 7 years old.

Keeping busy is good.  Makes the days fly by.  If there is a subject you would like to hear about, let me know.  I appreciate all comments, good and bad.

Have a great 4th of July weekend!