Hi Folks
Just to say Hello , new here , I started and have worked for many years in Television Broadcast, now that industry only needs very few technical people, so most of us are out to grass.I have found that the cinema which has has gone through major changes over the last 10 years, I still have a role to play, starting as a satellite installer and hook up to the main old cinema infrastructure, so new inputs can be part of the program along with the other use that the electronic projectors can be put to.
I enjoy the challenges that cinema calls up, though a lot of DCP type equipment is tied up by special selected companies which are only allowed to do the "Water marking " to stop folks copying material , so most of my work is at none DCP cinemas, like village halls and smaller theatres that wish to add satellite etc to their program, which is good move.
I do run across , what I call cinema kit in some of these, like Dolby decoders, mostly CP650's with the DMA8 addon units, which I can find "set up" and schematics for, have also done some work, on Dolby CP750's info on these is very little but most problems I can work out.
All this is to ask if you folks can help me with a Dolby CP950 I ran across the other day, bought from a DCP agent who is hitting bad times due to Covid 19, but no back up or user manuals help at all, so they asked me.
This unit I have made friends with,understand and can go through all the menus called up normally on the touch screen, got it working on satellite feeds via HDMI, it will be fed via matrix switcher for other inputs, all via HDMI, e.g Blu Ray, also taking a H.I feed for theatre hearing system.
My question is , the set up of this for cinemas, is it all done by the units software from Dolby, or is it done via hidden menus and laptop? I see the PCB has no trimpots, only one for Microphone input level, so not like the older versions of Dolby decoder.
Any help would be very good, can understand if you think this is a bit cheeky, to come on first to ask for help, but I hope to help others as time goes on.
Tony Smith
Just to say Hello , new here , I started and have worked for many years in Television Broadcast, now that industry only needs very few technical people, so most of us are out to grass.I have found that the cinema which has has gone through major changes over the last 10 years, I still have a role to play, starting as a satellite installer and hook up to the main old cinema infrastructure, so new inputs can be part of the program along with the other use that the electronic projectors can be put to.
I enjoy the challenges that cinema calls up, though a lot of DCP type equipment is tied up by special selected companies which are only allowed to do the "Water marking " to stop folks copying material , so most of my work is at none DCP cinemas, like village halls and smaller theatres that wish to add satellite etc to their program, which is good move.
I do run across , what I call cinema kit in some of these, like Dolby decoders, mostly CP650's with the DMA8 addon units, which I can find "set up" and schematics for, have also done some work, on Dolby CP750's info on these is very little but most problems I can work out.
All this is to ask if you folks can help me with a Dolby CP950 I ran across the other day, bought from a DCP agent who is hitting bad times due to Covid 19, but no back up or user manuals help at all, so they asked me.
This unit I have made friends with,understand and can go through all the menus called up normally on the touch screen, got it working on satellite feeds via HDMI, it will be fed via matrix switcher for other inputs, all via HDMI, e.g Blu Ray, also taking a H.I feed for theatre hearing system.
My question is , the set up of this for cinemas, is it all done by the units software from Dolby, or is it done via hidden menus and laptop? I see the PCB has no trimpots, only one for Microphone input level, so not like the older versions of Dolby decoder.
Any help would be very good, can understand if you think this is a bit cheeky, to come on first to ask for help, but I hope to help others as time goes on.
Tony Smith
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