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“How to offer our client maximum flexibility with the signal routing so that any source could be displayed on virtually any display device. We invented an ingenious solution using four Kramer ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switchers.”
Paul Kemp | Operations Manager, T. S. G. Media Ltd.

Customer

T. S. G. Media Ltd.

Industry

Entertainment

The Sheffield-based media programming and systems company, T.S.G, recently completed the AV installation at the new Lloyds No.1 bar Chichester with several products from Kramer included. “We wanted to offer our client better images than is possible with composite video” begins Paul Kemp, Operations Manager at T.S.G, “so we immediately thought of up-scaling the video to match the native resolution of the plasmas, projectors, and LCD Displays that we are installing in our clients’ premises.”

Lloyds No.1 bar Chichester is equipped with a ProMedia hard disk music and media video server that outputs music videos at composite video level, and local advertising and promotional content at VGA level. An additional source is provided by a satellite decoder that also outputs at the composite video level. “The next issue we faced” continues Kemp, “was how to offer our client maximum flexibility with the signal routing, so that any source could be displayed on virtually any display device. One option was to consider a scaling matrix, but this was discounted on the grounds of unreasonable cost, so we invented an ingenious solution using four Kramer VP-719DS ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switchers.” The two composite video signals are each fed into separate Kramer VM-50V 1:5 Composite video DAs and the graphics signal is fed into a Kramer VP-6xl 1:6 VGA/UXGA DA.

The four Kramer ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switchers take feeds from each of the DAs and then they up-scale and output the signals. The display devices that receive the up-scaled signals include an LCD projector, 3 plasma screens, and 2 LCD monitors. These displays are divided into 4 groups with Kramer VM-1055 RGBHV DAs reliably providing the necessary signal distribution to the displays whether near or far from the source.

The Kramer VP-719DS scaler/switchers have FTB™ (Fade-Thru-Black) switching which provides a clean, glitch-free transition between the various sources. These Kramer ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switchers models offer a cost-effective way to simplify multi-signal format installations.

Tags:

Entertainment

Control

Signal Management

EMEA

United Kingdom

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“We tested several solutions for delivering the signals to the projectors and Kramer’s was the best. In our long experience with Kramer’s products, they are very reliable, and that was a very important factor.”
Asi Goren | System Integration Project Manager, Protech Integration

Customer

Protech Integration Ltd.

Industry

Entertainment

Jerusalem’s iconic Tower of David is located in the magnificently restored Citadel in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem. Within the Citadel’s walls, the Tower of David Museum of the History of Jerusalem in Israel initiates and undertakes projects that add new dimensions to the usual museum experience. A spectacular night show joins a long tradition of exhibits and projects that juxtapose the ancient and modern.

The night show, created by Skertzo, envelopes the spectator in a powerful multi-sensory experience. Its dynamic collage changes the visitor’s perceptions of time and place using motifs connected to the city’s history projected on the very walls, archeological ruins, bridges, and hidden pathways where the history unfolded.  The show, which draws many thousands of visitors to the museum annually, runs at least four times a week under almost any weather conditions.

The installation was extremely demanding. Sensitive electronic equipment and a high-resolution DVI signal distribution system needed to be installed over a distance in an outdoor venue that withstands severe climate changes throughout the entire year. More challenging was to install the system in an archeological site that dictated complex physical conditions, strict aesthetic demands, and extremely difficult cable routing.

The installation was extremely demanding. Sensitive electronic equipment and a high-resolution DVI signal distribution system needed to be installed over a distance in an outdoor venue that withstands severe climate changes throughout the entire year.

As soon as the project was confirmed, Protech Integration had less than three months to decide on equipment, install infrastructure, design and assemble weather-proof projection rooms, lay fiber optic cables for video and control, and design command rooms. Projectors were placed in several locations, at various distances from digital sources.
Protech Integration, a leading company of digital display and video in Israel, selected Kramer’s solution to distribute DVI signals and to deliver these signals over fiber optic cables for high-quality transmission regardless of distance or climate conditions.

Medial on Manager controls all AV equipment used in the show, including twenty projectors driven by ten Only view servers and ten Adtec high-definition players. An Alesis hard disk audio player is used for the multichannel soundtrack and the sound system is produced by NEXO.
Every projector in the setup receives its signals using Kramer 621T and 621R DVI over fiber optic cable transmitter/receiver pairs and Kramer LC-4 optical cables to ensure the highest-quality DVI transmission. 20 VM-2HDCP 1:2 DVI distribution amplifiers provide continuous monitoring of the show over local monitors.

“Because of the impossible time schedule, we had to install equipment and design the system at the same time, the only way to succeed was to work using a very precise timetable” said Asi Goren from Protech Integration. “We tested several solutions for delivering the signals to the projectors and Kramer’s was the best. In our long experience with Kramer’s products, they are very reliable, and that was a very important factor.”

Tags:

Entertainment

Connectivity

Signal Management

EMEA

Israel

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“The only company that showed a functioning XGA over CAT-5 system was Kramer. Other companies just showed unconnected boxes, not an operating system.
Peter Lindquist | Designer and Owner of KJPL ARbyte

Customer

KJPL ARbyte

Industry

Entertainment

The unique Portuguese museum is the first language museum in the world, located in an old train station in San Paulo, Brazil. An impressive and innovative Audio Visual system was installed inside the museum, which is also unique worldwide. Using 36 projectors in series, it creates a 106 meters long by 2.5 meters high computer image on one screen. This is the world’s longest multi-projector image. Controlled by a server, special software splits the long image into 36 pieces, with overlapping between the images.


To send the 36 XGA resolution images from the server to the projectors, each of them with a different cable length, Mr. Peter Lindquist, the designer, and owner of KJPL ARbyte, which installed the system, used 36 pairs of Kramer PT-110 and PT-120 XGA over CAT-5 Transmitters and Receivers.

It is the world’s longest multi-projector image. Using 36 projectors in series, it creates a 106 meters long by 2.5 meters high computer image on one screen.


“First of all,” says Peter, “We had two problems: the cost of cables, we were looking for a more economical solution, and the long distance to part of the projectors, the longest cable is about 120 meters. First, we looked at the KVM solution but it was too expensive. Later I went to the InfoComm 2005 show in the USA, looking for a good solution at a reasonable cost. The only company that showed a functioning XGA over CAT-5 system was Kramer. Other companies just showed unconnected boxes, not an operating system. Later I got a demo pair of their XGA over CAT-5 transmitters and receivers, tested and approved it, and later ordered and installed the 36 pairs, to my complete professional satisfaction”.


This Portuguese museum was inaugurated on March 21, 2006, in the presence of high-level officials from both Portugal and Brazil, the largest Portuguese-speaking country in the world. In the first 4 months, about 206,000 visited it.

Tags:

Entertainment

Connectivity

Signal Management

Americas

Brazil

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Kramer distribution amplifier plays a part in an interactive stand that runs a presentation about various water facilities.

Customer

Saint Petersburg Museum of Water

Industry

Entertainment

The opening of the museum for the public is dedicated to various water-related technologies (water use, conditioning, and purification) and Kramer’s VP-300, RGB distribution amplifier, plays a part in an interactive stand that runs a presentation about various water facilities.

The presentation system, built by “A Screen,” uses 61’’ and two 42’’ plasma screens with interactive touch screens. Dedicated software allows starting a video playback on the large screen with a touch of a corresponding icon on a 42’’ panel. The second 42’’ panel is used for running a presentation, accompanying the video, or displaying any other related information. This significantly simplifies the guide’s job, who acts as a mere operator of the system. The narration is voice-overed by an “interactive mannequin,” a wax figure, whose face is animated by the projection of a specially prepared video. The voice-over comes from ceiling speakers synchronously with the mannequin’s byplay that includes blinking of eyelids and tilting of eyebrows. In addition to the plasma panels and the projector, the system includes a DVD player, a DVD-VCR combo, a mixer/amplifier, a network switcher, and 3 computers for the system and interactive touch screens control.

Tags:

Entertainment

Control

Signal Management

EMEA

Russia

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“We were able to get excellent response and clear picture even at that distance. The Kramer transmitters and receivers were the best solutions available for the application, regardless of the cost – but the feature/value package was also right.”
Brock McGinnis | Sales manager, Westbury National

Custoemr

Casino Niagara

Industry

Entertainment

Hampton, New Jersey– February 14, 2006 – Celebrating their 25th Anniversary in 2006, Kramer, an ISO 9001:2000 certified company, and a worldwide supplier of audio, video, and computer graphics signal distribution, switching and processing equipment, and Sierra Video Systems, a Kramer Company, are pleased to announce the use of their products in the newly redesigned Casino Niagara in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

Casino Niagara recently embarked upon a “re-invention” in a saturated Canadian casino market because they wanted to attract a young, mainstream audience. Their goal was to not only capitalize on the popularity of sports betting, televised poker, and off-track betting, but also to increase their table and slot machine business. At the center of this stunning new facility are Kramer and Sierra Video Systems products. From the three-story media tree to the sports lounge plasmas, Kramer twisted pair transmitters and receivers and Sierra Video Systems routing switchers flawlessly move video signals to over 100 displays throughout the building. While sporting events are broadcast in the lounge, graphics and promotional information are displayed on the media tree, and live performances from the third-floor stage are broadcast throughout the building.

When the project began, the Casino Niagara folks enlisted the help of Toronto architecture firm Reich & Petch to do a total overhaul of the building. Designing a concept of high-impact architectural features in an entertainment environment, Reich & Petch looked to Westbury National, a local professional audio/video/lighting installation firm, to make it a reality. Westbury National in turn worked with White Radio, the exclusive Canadian Distributor for Kramer and Sierra Video products, to assist Westbury National with the necessary Kramer and Sierra Video products to accomplish this goal.
“Reich & Petch wanted to replace the building’s dated architectural waterfall with a huge three-story media tree right in the middle of the escalator atrium,” said Brock McGinnis, sales manager at Westbury National. “Our job was to incorporate that structural concept with Casino Niagara’s marketing and visual entertainment requirements.”

The switchers allow content from any source to be shown on displays throughout the building. They also route video from remote cameras in the rotunda, where rock bands perform live.

The media tree includes over 150 plasma and LCD displays, 80 LED lights to make the media tree change colors, rear projection video walls, an advanced sound system, and a network of routing switchers, converters, and receivers to transmit high-quality video content. The media tree installation was not without challenges. The three-story media tree in the atrium had to be built from the bottom up. When the first level was built, the installation teams climbed onto it to create the next level, building intermediate structures to hold the workers. Additionally, space and design constraints prohibited using high-quality but bulky 5-wire RGB cables. Single-wire CAT 5 network cabling was used to connect to Kramer TP-200 receivers, which could service two pairs of monitors on the tree with a single wire. The TP-200 receivers were mounted between pairs of video monitors and connected to Kramer TP-100 transmitters in the rack room, 500-600 feet away.
“We were able to get excellent response and clear picture even at that distance,” McGinnis commented. “The Kramer TP-100 and TP-200 transmitters and receivers were absolutely the best solution available for the application, regardless of the cost – but the feature/value package was also right.”

The main rack room contains all of the switching components, including a Sierra 3232V5 RGBHV matrix switcher for the media tree, a Sierra 3232V3S component video and audio matrix switcher for the Sports Bar and OTB lounge, a Sierra 1616V5 RGBHV matrix switcher for the casino gaming floor and food and beverage marketing, and a Sierra 84V5 RGBHV matrix switcher for the rotunda video wall. The switchers allow content from any source to be shown on displays throughout the building. They also route video from remote cameras in the rotunda, where rock bands perform live.

Sierra Video Systems’ matrix switchers fit the bill for the installation because of features like built-in redundant power supplies, full bandwidth on all channels, and two separate s-Video and composite video jacks.

According to Mike Webb, audio/video manager for Casino Niagara, the new entertainment theme has successfully increased business, and the equipment design has helped his team to run the show flawlessly. His full-time crew controls the constantly changing content on the displays, the audio levels on the floor, the sports betting content, and the cameras that videotape the live performances.

Casino Niagara is continuing to build its system, with 12 new display installations throughout the property, taking the clientele closer to Las Vegas than they imagined.

Tags:

Entertainment

Signal Management

Americas

United States

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In their tours worldwide, the Watoto Children’s Choir uses the Kramer VP-719DS ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switcher to switch between video and PC images.

Customer

Watoto Children’s Choir

Industry

Entertainment

In their tours worldwide, the Watoto Children’s Choir uses the Kramer VP-719DS ProScale™ Digital Scaler/Switcher to switch between video and PC images. In 1983, Gary and Marilyn Skinner, Canadian missionaries, established an English-speaking church in the heart of Kampala, Uganda, where approximately 2 million children have been orphaned by the civil war and AIDS. In 1992, Skinners started Watoto Child Care Ministries to address the Ugandan orphan crisis. “Watoto” (pronounced: wah-toe-toe) means “children” in Swahili. Funding for Watoto Child Care Ministries is raised exclusively by the Watoto Children’s Choir.

Since 1994 Watoto Choirs have toured internationally, accompanied by a team of adults. Together they present Watoto’s vision and mission through their music and dance, an energetic fusion of contemporary gospel and traditional African rhythm. Watoto Children’s Choir has had two unique opportunities to perform for the President of the United States and various members of his cabinet. On June 10, 2003, Watoto was invited to perform at a ceremony in the Rose Garden at The White House in Washington D.C.

The choir also sang for the President and First Lady at their request on July 11, 2003, at an AIDS event in Entebbe, Uganda as part of Bush’s five-nation tour of Africa. As a result the choir was in the spotlight of the international media appearing on CNN, the BBC, ABC Nightly News with Peter Jennings, and on the cover of The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Washington Post, and the African edition of TIME magazine among many others.

Tags:

Entertainment

Houses of Worship

Control

Signal Management

EMEA

Uganda

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Customer

HMS

Industry

Hospitality

Kramer products have been installed aboard the world’s largest cruise ship, the newly finished Queen Mary 2. HMS, the company charged with the conception and installation of audio-visual systems aboard the Queen Mary 2, choose several Kramer products to incorporate into the ship’s AV systems. Specifically, HMS employed Kramer products for all signal distribution, switching, and conversion aboard the ship, products such as FC-4041C, FC-4044, VM-3Vxl, VM-50V, 104L, VS-421, VS-24, VS-5×4, VS-4E.

The large selection of products in the Kramer line and their reliability made them an ideal choice for this rather large and complex installation. HMS is a French company that specializes in the conception, design, and installation of audio-visual and lighting systems. HMS has subsidiaries all around the world.

Tags:

Entertainment

Hospitality

Control

Signal Management

EMEA

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Sports Café in Glasgow Chooses Kramer VS-162V 16×16 Matrix Switchers for Their Flexibility, Easy Set Up and Maintenance

All AV and satellite outputs can be patched to any screen destination via two Kramer VS-162V 16×16 Matrix Switchers, picked for their complete flexibility, easy setup, and maintenance.

Leading sound, lighting, and AV designers and installers Metropolis AV and FX have completed the design, supply, and installation of the entire lighting, sound, and AV system at the new Sports Café in Glasgow. The £1.7m project has seen an empty building in Glasgow’s famous Sauchiehall Street, turn into a busy, 1600-capacity, modern sports-themed environment. The building has a colourful history; it was a local ABC cinema before being converted in the latest Sports Café Bars rollout. During the renovation, whilst digging for the service trenches, an array of animal pits were discovered which dated back to when the building was used by Hadlers Circus, complete with livestock housed in the basement. The venue caters to sports enthusiasts and socializers of all persuasions.

Facilities include 6 bars, a dining area, and a large dance floor. The venue entrance is off the street, and leads along a corridor to the reception/greeting point, followed by the horseshoe bar and seated dining area and booths. Around the corner after the first bar/dining, the venue really opens up, revealing two more bars and a large dance floor, complete with a large roll-down video screen. Up the stairs is the first-floor Pool Lounge, complete with 16 tables and its own bar. Around the corner is the champagne lounge, a dedicated quieter zone of the venue for those wanting to chat and enjoy a lower level of music. Also on the first floor is the Team Room, fully self-contained and hire-able for private functions. Metropolis fitted 68 Panasonic TV screens – a mixture of 32 and 28-inch, installed throughout the venue and restrooms, plus nine 42-inch Panasonic plasmas behind bars.

A total of eighteen 15” TFT screens were specified, 6 of which are in the dining booths allowing the diners to control the picture at their booth. Twelve screens were fitted into the rear wall of the reception desk all showing different pictures from the available 12 satellite decoders. There is one Sanyo (SL-15 POAP) projector with smoke-proof housing installed on the dance floor, plus a Sanyo (SU31 POAP) in the Team Room on the first floor. All A.V. and satellite outputs can be patched to any screen destination via two Kramer VS-162V 16×16 Matrix Switchers, picked for their full flexibility, easy setup, and maintenance. The sound was an important area.

There was much space to cover and considerable control was needed to minimise sound spillage between the audio zones. The zoning of the audio system allows the Team Room to be used as a separate venue with audio, video, and computer connection points within the room going back to the main system. Metropolis also piped audio into the toilets via 8 JBL Control 24C’s, as no 21st-century look is complete without the very coolest and highest quality sounds! The Sports Café’s system processing is achieved via an Allen & Heath iDR-8 processor utilising the PL-8 Button control for a fire alarm interface. A Cloud Z4 Zoner divides the venue into four zones.

The brief included making the dancefloor area lighting colourful and stimulating. Metropolis also undertook staff training for all the various technical areas, designed to run smoothly with minimum interference. Please see Metropolis AV & FX for more information.

Tags:

Entertainment

Control

Signal Management

EMEA

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