This problem relates to my AV being shown at the local cinema last Sunday. The signal went in from my Oppo Blu-ray player via a HDMI cable. I thought I had sorted out all the problems beforehand (see http://www.film-tech.com/vbb/forum/m...g-at-level-248), but a new one cropped up during the show. Five times during a 2-3 minute segment, the screen went black for maybe a second or two. I'd like suggestions as to why that might have occurred. I will be running this by the tech in a few days time, but I would like some suggestions before I do that.
The control room has four identical projectors in a large room (6 x 30m?), two on each side.
Where the problem DOES NOT lie
I can't be 100% sure, but I don't see the problem being with the following, for the reasons given.
1. Not the Oppo player. We've used the Oppo player at home for about 100 hours a year for the last 10 years and have never seen the image intermittently drop out. In fact, I don't think that would be possible, because if the video connection was lost, the projector and player would have to resync, and with my setup that takes about 20 seconds while re-sync messages appear on the screen. So any loss of image because of the player or HDMI cable would have been very obvious.
2. Not in the video itself. During production, testing, and previous showings over several years, I have watched this segment about 50 times. There are no short-term black dropouts. I've just watched it again and the segment is pure.
3. Not a power failure. One woman asked me after the show: "Did you have a power failure? I know what that looks like because it has happened at home – the Oppo will take about 30-40 seconds to reboot and sync.
4. Not a continuity failure. Other than the 1-second flashes to black, the AV didn't lose a beat. The video and audio were sharply lost, and sharply returned in sync, the video staying black for a second.
5. Not five 1-second lamp failures (as in faulty connection). If the lamp or its connections were somehow faulty, I wouldn't expect a sharp transition to black. I would expect a exponential fade to black over 1-2 seconds, like when you turn a slide projector off. Meaning that a 1-second light off, followed by a light on, would appear as a slight diminution, not complete blackness.
Two possible mechanisms
I can think of two mechanisms that could have caused the loss of light:
1. A mechanical barrier blocking the light, similar to what I can invoke in my BenQ PU9730. I can call up a Blank function which physically blocks the projector light with a metal disk.
2. The DLP chip has an intermittent fault.
Where the problem may lie
There must be some problem with the video signal after it gets inside the Christie CP2220 or the associated Doremi unit (I don't know what a Doremi is; it's what the tech told me some time back).
Now here's the thing: it was a 150 minute show. These blips occurred at around 115-120 minutes, at approximately the same time as I felt cool air on my back. I was in the back row and the air-conditioning had just kicked in.
Two Questions
Is it possible that an air-conditioner could cause transients that would interfere with the projector's light?
Any suggestions as to what might have caused the video blips?
The control room has four identical projectors in a large room (6 x 30m?), two on each side.
Where the problem DOES NOT lie
I can't be 100% sure, but I don't see the problem being with the following, for the reasons given.
1. Not the Oppo player. We've used the Oppo player at home for about 100 hours a year for the last 10 years and have never seen the image intermittently drop out. In fact, I don't think that would be possible, because if the video connection was lost, the projector and player would have to resync, and with my setup that takes about 20 seconds while re-sync messages appear on the screen. So any loss of image because of the player or HDMI cable would have been very obvious.
2. Not in the video itself. During production, testing, and previous showings over several years, I have watched this segment about 50 times. There are no short-term black dropouts. I've just watched it again and the segment is pure.
3. Not a power failure. One woman asked me after the show: "Did you have a power failure? I know what that looks like because it has happened at home – the Oppo will take about 30-40 seconds to reboot and sync.
4. Not a continuity failure. Other than the 1-second flashes to black, the AV didn't lose a beat. The video and audio were sharply lost, and sharply returned in sync, the video staying black for a second.
5. Not five 1-second lamp failures (as in faulty connection). If the lamp or its connections were somehow faulty, I wouldn't expect a sharp transition to black. I would expect a exponential fade to black over 1-2 seconds, like when you turn a slide projector off. Meaning that a 1-second light off, followed by a light on, would appear as a slight diminution, not complete blackness.
Two possible mechanisms
I can think of two mechanisms that could have caused the loss of light:
1. A mechanical barrier blocking the light, similar to what I can invoke in my BenQ PU9730. I can call up a Blank function which physically blocks the projector light with a metal disk.
2. The DLP chip has an intermittent fault.
Where the problem may lie
There must be some problem with the video signal after it gets inside the Christie CP2220 or the associated Doremi unit (I don't know what a Doremi is; it's what the tech told me some time back).
Now here's the thing: it was a 150 minute show. These blips occurred at around 115-120 minutes, at approximately the same time as I felt cool air on my back. I was in the back row and the air-conditioning had just kicked in.
Two Questions
Is it possible that an air-conditioner could cause transients that would interfere with the projector's light?
Any suggestions as to what might have caused the video blips?
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