MINI-MOTE
WGSF Television expanded the ability for remote production by putting together
what we called the MINI-MOTE (Miniature remote unit).
Mounted on the Blue Cart, the Mini-mote could be loaded into the Blue Truck
(or other vehicle) and taken just about anywhere, and it was.
An ampex 2 inch VR-660 VTR would fit on top of the cart for recording, providing
two hours of recording time on one of the large reels of tape, with editing
capability.
The television camera was the GBC videcon, with zoom lens.
The sync generator was a small solid state unit, which fit into a special
rack mount containing a pulse distribution amplifier.
Electrical power was routed through a powerstat, a variable transformer,
with voltage meters built into the panel. The VR-660 was especially
sensitive to power line voltages higher or lower than the standard 120 VAC.
A 3-monitor rack mount unit was used for picture monitoring.
A Shure audio mixer was used for microphone and Auxiliary audio inputs.
The Mini-mote was used for coverage of the Ohio State Fair in 1974 (?) at
a time when most television stations were anchored to a fixed venue. WGSF
roamed the fairgrounds, getting a very enthusiastic response from the people
we covered. We could edit on the fly with the VR-660B Edicon® system.
Even though the rubber on the old wheels on the cart peeled off from the
weight (the VTR alone weighed nearly 100 pounds) the ability to go nearly
anywhere made a for sucessful addition to the station's production capability.
It proved to be the beginning of the end for the large RCA production truck,
which took well over an hour to set up. We could wheel in with the
Mini-mote, plug into any standard 120 volt AC source, set up the small
tripod/dolly and camera, hook up the cables, and record - all in the matter
of a few minutes.
Later, a newer version of the Mini-mote was used for years providing television
production facilities at Newark High School. The cart had larger, sturdier
wheels, color cameras, better monitoring, a video switcher with effects,
the Shure Audio mixer, and either a 3/4 inch U-matic® videocassette
recorder, or the newer 1/2 inch VHS VCR system. Many programs were aired
live on the CATV system, CATV 19, as well as recorded. The cart was wheeled
all over the Newark High campus, and one of the specially equipped school
busses with a wheelchair lift was utilized to take it to other production
locations that were covered with multiple cameras.