The Components Of a Television Station Savannah GA

Most people have a television set these days, but very few actually understand the process of programs transmission. To learn more about how TV programs are transmitted, read the following article.

Local Companies

Maddux Supply Co
(912) 355-6761
4116 Ogeechee Rd
Savannah, GA
Georgia Electric Supply Inc
(912) 234-2231
19 Westgate Blvd
Savannah, GA
GE Supply
(912) 963-0824
3911 Old Louisville Rd
Savannah, GA
GE Company
(912) 963-0824
Savannah, GA
Winlectric
(912) 233-7717
3801 Ogeechee Rd
Savannah, GA
City Electric Supply
(912) 966-5446
101 Airport Park Dr
Savannah, GA
Consolidated Electrical Distributor
(912) 232-8999
2900 Tremont Rd
Savannah, GA
City Electric Supply
(912) 232-3411
2615 Skidaway Rd
Savannah, GA
Circuit City
(912) 925-0253
8108 Abercorn St Ste G
Savannah, GA
City Electric Supplies
(478) 405-5410
130 Steven Dr
MacOn, GA

There are three basic steps involved in the transmission of a television programme. These are:

· Material – this is the programme itself

· Master control – this selects the programme to be transmitted

· Effects – this includes the network identifier

The programme itself can be in a number of different formats. A live transmission is where the material is coming directly from a live feed, such as a sports or news event. A second source of material is from a digital video server. This is basically a huge computer hard drive that has various pieces of material recorded on it that can be played at any time. The final type of material is from tape. This tape tends to be digital video, but analogue tapes can still be played too using a special analogue-to-digital converter.

The master control operator, or transmission operator, is responsible for selecting the correct programme to air at the right time. This can be done manually, usually in a live programme, or automated using a transmission program. During a live event, the operator is responsible for selecting commercials at the ad breaks, and then going back to the live feed at the end of each commercial break.

If the material is pre-recorded, either on tape or server, the operator is responsible for starting the material playing, as well as ensuring that the feed is being transmitted. Most television networks use an automated system, and the operator simply loads in the day’s schedule. The rest of their time is spent monitoring the transmission, and ensuring that the material for the day is loaded into the VCRs or digital video servers as appropriate.

The effects that we see on many television programmes have become so common that we often don’t notice them. But everything that is superimposed on the actual programme has to be controlled by a transmission operator, or automated transmission system. These include station identifiers, scoreboards, and ‘tickers’ with information scrolling across the screen.

About the Author:

John Rivers is editor of Digital Video Vault. At Digital Video Vault you will find information on digital camcorders, video camera reviews, video reviews, and user opinions. http://www.digitalvideovault.co.uk.

Article Source: thePhantomWriters Article Submission Service


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