The ENG Bonanza

By Glen Dickson
Broadcasting & Cable

8/6/2006

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6359717.html


One vital link in the news-production chain is due for dramatic change over 
the next two years: the electronic newsgathering (ENG) equipment used to 
relay video from the field back to the studio.

It's all going to be replaced, and paid for by wireless-phone giant Sprint 
Nextel.

That big change is happening because ENG is shifting from analog to digital 
microwave gear as part of an unusual $4.8 billion spectrum agreement the 
FCC brokered with Sprint Nextel in February 2005.

The deal moves some of Sprint Nextel's operations out of the 800 megahertz 
(MHz) frequency band, where its signals were interfering with public-safety 
communications. Sprint's frequency will become part of the 2 gigahertz 
(GHz) band. That's the part of the spectrum broadcasters currently use for 
ENG links.

To compensate broadcasters for moving off their ENG channels and converting 
to digital microwave gear on a smaller swath of spectrum, Sprint Nextel 
will pony up roughly $500 million for the equipment those stations will 
need. Digital ENG systems for standard news vans run $35,000-$50,000, plus 
the cost of multiple receive sites scattered around large cities; 
large-market stations may have 10 or more receive sites. Although Sprint 
Nextel is picking up the tab, broadcasters face an initial challenge in 
learning how to use the new digital ENG equipment.

The “2 GHz Relocation” should be completed by September 2007. It has been 
slowed by complicated negotiations between broadcasters and Sprint Nextel 
on legal and business—not technical—issues. A company spokesman says things 
are now progressing quickly. As of last week, Sprint Nextel says, 
relocation schemes for 185 out of 205 U.S. TV markets are progressing. The 
ABC station group is on board, and other group owners are nearing 
agreements, the wireless company says.

Microwave manufacturers are starting to ship new digital microwave systems, 
albeit slowly. Microwave Radio Corp. (MRC) has fulfilled some $75 million 
in Sprint Nextel orders for digital ENG gear, says MRC VP Dan McIntyre, but 
most of it is still sitting in its warehouse in Billerica, Mass., waiting 
for Sprint Nextel to give the go-ahead to send it to stations.

MRC's “CodeRunner” digital ENG system was a proven commodity long before 
the Sprint Nextel deal, and “thousands” have been sold worldwide, says 
McIntyre. But even early adopters of the COFDM-based ENG system will get 
new gear under the Sprint Nextel frequency-relocation plan.

The GHz process is similarly going slowly for NuComm, another ENG supplier. 
It has received a “half dozen or so orders” for its digital microwave gear 
through Sprint Nextel, according to NuComm Director of Sales and Marketing 
John Dulany. Like MRC, NuComm has previously sold COFDM-based gear to a 
couple hundred stations. “Even if stations bought some of that gear,” 
Dulany says, “it's older technology, and it is still getting upgraded” 
under the reallocation deal.

That will take some time. Mike Smith, VP of news and production for Gray TV 
CBS affiliate WCTV Tallahassee, Fla., says Sprint Nextel has inspected the 
station's existing ENG equipment. But it will be between six months and a 
year before new gear arrives.

In the meantime, suppliers are marketing gear outside of the relocation 
process. Portable, compact microwave systems that can be carried in a 
regular-size auto and set up on the fly for breaking-news events are now 
hot items. MRC, NuComm and RF Central make versions, which were originally 
developed for sports coverage.

The wireless transmitters mount easily on a camera's battery and can be 
used by themselves for shooting within a short distance—say, a few 
blocks—from an ENG van. When paired with a high-powered amplifier, they can 
transmit video feeds at a range of 10-30 miles.

RF Central's portable high-power transmitter (PHT) is being used by some 16 
stations. The $30,000 system comprises a camera-mounted transmitter and a 
power amplifier housed in a box the size of a lunch pail —small enough to 
be a carry-on item on a jet airliner, says RF Central President/CEO Jeff 
Winemiller.

“It's a big hit in downtown environments because the [COFDM] signal 
[performs well in] multipath,” he says. “Where you would do an analog 
bounce shot, the digital just bounces off a building and gets to the 
receive site. You couldn't do that live with a mast.”

Stewart Romain, chief engineer for Raycom Media's KOLD Tucson, Ariz., says 
that, without the PHT amplifier, the range was about a half mile. With the 
amplifier, the station received feeds from one side of Tucson to the other, 
a “12-mile shot.”

“The thing is small, and it can go in the back of a station wagon or in an 
actual live truck,” he says. “Our normal operation will still be live 
trucks, but we can use these portables for an emergency: You grab one of 
the news cars, throw it in the back seat, run to the story, and set up and 
go.”


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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