Friday, August 17, 2012

McMurdo Movie Channels, Radio Station, and a Glowing Nacreous Afternoon




McMurdo television station is operated by the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS). A friend of mine is the broadcast engineer and I took a tour of the facility. There are about 800 movies on station in the Hi8 format. The format really surprised me. Each of the two movie channels show 4 movies each day. When I arrived here I noticed that several of the movies shown were not available on DVD yet. They were still showing in theaters.

Two banks of Hi8 tape players and timers.

The navy converts all the movies to Hi8 tape format. Sometime in the future the station will upgrade to DVD format.

Twelve channels of tv.

John loads all the next days movies and sets the timers before he leaves for the day.

There are 800 Hi8 tapes.

One of the timers.

Three channels (BBC, New Zealand TV and Australia TV are fed to McMurdo from Scott Base.

New NSF vans that came in on the ship in February. They have been moved here from the Helicopter airfield.


The wheels/tires are way too small.

A nacreous afternoon.

So many colors.


The sky does not look real. What an afternoon! Eventually the -41 degF chilled us and we had to go inside.

Mt. Erebus



Three 'wing' clouds stacked together.

Looking across the sound from Hut Point.

What a beautiful day but oh so cold.



I have never seen a more beautiful sky.

McMurdo Radio Station (an interesting history)

McMurdo radio station goes high-tech with retro vinyl

www.AntarcticGuide.com
http://antarcticsun.usap.gov/features/contenthandler.cfm?id=2604
Turn up the volume
McMurdo radio station goes high-tech but retains retro vinyl collection By Peter Rejcek, Antarctic Sun Editor
Posted February 24, 2012
Army Sgt 1st Class Bart Schrum had never been to Antarctica, but he was one of two people assigned to upgrade the civilian radio station used by the U.S. Antarctic Program (USAP) out of McMurdo Station.
There was one odd thing about the job. The schematics called for a couple of turntables to play vinyl records.
“There shouldn’t be turntables on there,” he recalled thinking.
It turns out there was nothing wrong with the drawings. McMurdo just happens to boast one of the largest — and possibly one of the last — record collections of any media outlet overseen by the Defense Media Activity (DMA). Depending on who’s doing the counting, the collection ranges from 12,000 to 20,000 records.
“I’ve never seen vinyls until I got here,” said Interior Communications Electrician 2 Jessica Lopez, who, along with Schrum, spent about three weeks in McMurdo earlier in the 2011-12 field season to install a fancy new digital-analog radio station system. Two people from DMA typically come down every year to McMurdo for routine maintenance on the audio and visual systems, as well as for special projects like the radio station upgrade.
DMA is the one-stop-shop for all communications and media under the Department of Defense. The U.S. military, as part of Operation Deep Freeze , supports the National Science Foundation’s research mission in Antarctica, primarily in transportation and logistics, including the operation of cargo flights aboard the huge C-17 Globemaster III and the charter of fuel and resupply vessels every year.
And, of course, the military supports the TV and radio station operations. The relationship dates back to the 1950s when the U.S. Navy was assigned to run all of the day-to-day operations for research in the Antarctic — a job now done mostly by civilian contractors.
The original radio station was on the air as early as 1963 under the call sign KMSA, according to Billy-Ace Penguin Baker, a retired Navy radioman who, between 1962 and 1980, spent four winters and 15 summers in Antarctica as part of Operation Deep Freeze.
By 1971, the call sign was WASA, for W Antarctic Support Activities, and by 1975, it was AFAN (American Forces Antarctic Network).
“During my first two winters [1963 and 1967], the radio station was located in the same building with the bowling alley,” Baker said, referring to a structure that was torn down just a few years ago. “In those days the retail store, the barbershop, and beer sales were also located in that building.
“During that timeframe there [were] no disc jockeys, and only music tapes were played. During the winter, we moved it up to the transmitter site and the guys up there changed the tapes,” he added.
Eventually, the radio station was moved to its current location in Building 155, with the record collection tucked into a nearby room. Building 155 is also home to McMurdo’s dining hall and kitchen, retail store, along with offices and residential dorm rooms.
Today, there are three radio stations (and several TV stations). The original radio station is now Ice 104.5 FM, boasting 50 watts of power, about enough to send a signal maybe 10 miles onto the ice shelf, if any seals are tuning in.
The new $100,000 radio station setup boasts some 38,000 digital songs, allowing the station’s 30-plus volunteer DJs to click and drag their sets into a queue. The library includes everything from rock to country to rap.
“I don’t have to search for my music. It’s all there in a row. Everything I need is there. It really eases the pain as far as what a DJ has to do in terms of research,” Schrum said of the new software.
On a Tuesday night, volunteer DJ Tristan Eames of New Hampshire was in the radio station, working out the kinks of the new system by queuing up a song by the Kinks. He was particularly excited to spin some tunes on the new turntables.
“I’m going to play Nirvana on vinyl, because how often do you get to play Nirvana on vinyl?” said Eames, who works in supply for the kitchen in his first year on the Ice. “I was blown away by the records. … It’s a great way to explore music.”
Rumor has it that at least part of the vinyl collection came from Vietnam, and that many of the records were played by none other than Adrian Cronauer on his radio show in Saigon in 1965-66. Cronauer was the music DJ who bucked the military brass, as portrayed by Robin Williams in the 1987 comedy “Good Morning, Vietnam.”


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