CSR is doing an outside broadcast at the music festival called Lounge on the Farm, and broadcasting live (right now as of this writing) on the Internet and on FM 97.4MHz in Canterbury. I am a volunteer for Engineering, and the team had the challenge of making all this possible.
On Thursday morning at about 1030 we rocked up to the “venue” in The Kitchen van. We found a pig/horse/cattle shed, complete with straw and cobwebs, and various forms of Hanging Death.
We got the farmer to remove the hanging guttering you see in the above picture, and we removed most of the dangling bits of wood in the roof and put duct tape over all the sharp bits on the walls.
After a large amount of sweeping and clearing, we manage to get it into a semi-decent state so we can start putting all of the kit into the “rooms”. Meanwhile, we were setting up the 5GHz link between the pigshed and the site office where there is an Internet connection.
Here we have a wind up stand, with a crossbar holding an point-to-point wireless link we got from Solwise, and a FM antenna for our radio tuner in the studio.
Once we had the client end of the wireless link in position, we were ready to install the other end. Fortunately, we had found a place to mount the other side that was in perfect line of sight to the receiver. However, it was a little bit scary.
Here we see a terrified looking Rich on the top of a bent lighting mast, and a bit of CAT5 flying down to the portacabins below. We then ran the CAT5 through a window in the site office and into the kitchen (!!) where they have their ADSL router. We installed the Power over Ethernet Injector (which we were praying would work over that length of cable), and plugged it in. And what do you know, it worked perfectly first time.
Once the Internet connection was up, we set about building the transmission equipment.
We’ve got a little AMD Semperon machine which has a DI coming from the studio on the other side of the shed, which is then encoded into AAC+ by SAM Broadcaster and sent over the network connection to the station on the Canterbury campus. We chose AAC+ due to its ability to encode to high quality over very low bitrates. This also means that we don’t need very much bandwidth to provide the stream, which is very good when you’re out in the sticks! It’s quite resilient to packet loss too, as we found.
Most of the networking kit is running off a UPS – mainly so that if the power fluctuates (which is does, quite a lot) then we don’t break the power supply too much, and the link won’t go down (causing a lengthy rebooting process, and potential dead air).
Next to Tech Corner (also known as Rat corner, due to there being a dead rat lying there when we arrived), we have 2 edit stations, where the producers can download content from the recorder units we are using on the stage, and edit them for playout using Audacity.
And finally, the studio.
The studio consists of 4 mics, 2 mixers, a playout system, 2 CD decks and an outboard with compressors and a Saphire 90 sound card. We ended up using SAM Broadcaster for playout. There’s an area for guests in front of the desk, and 2 presenters behind it.
So far, the broadcast has been going beautifully – there was a power outage this morning (we think the main stage is using the same power feed as us, and the breakers tripped). After our Engineers moved the power over to a genny feed, we were back up and running.
I wasn’t actually on site today, however I will be there tomorrow and I hope to post an update from the pigshed!








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