ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—KOAT-TV is a Hearst
Television station and ABC affiliate. Our DMA
covers more than 130,000 square miles—including
the entire state of New Mexico—as
well as Southern Colorado and Southeast
Utah. When a big news story breaks past the
100-mile mark from our headquarters, many
times we send out multiple crews working
rotating shifts. This requirement necessitates
a news production vehicle with more working
space than would ordinarily be needed.
‘NEW MEXICO’ TOUGH
Shortly before Christmas last year, we
took delivery of the newest addition to
our ENG/SNG fleet. The
truck was the first of a
new generation “News-
Runner” series box truck
built by AMT, and the first
one constructed on the
larger International Terra
Star chassis. The heaver
chassis in the new truck
was an important consideration
as New Mexico’s
terrain ranges from 3,000
feet in the south to well
over 11,000 feet near the
Colorado boarder. An under-
powered vehicle just
can’t hold up in this environment. We felt
that the News-Runner was the right choice
in terms of size, speed and power. It is also
extremely well designed, very rugged and
had the same quality you’d expect to see in
million-dollar production trailers.
Every step of the vehicle’s construction
was coordinated with the engineering staff
and when the truck was delivered it was all
ready to cover its first story. KOAT-TV’s vehicle
included some additions beyond those
found in a standard SNG truck, including an
SDI switcher with a custom AMT panel that
provides a simple connection of the control
panel and multiviewer monitor when we’re
doing four or five camera production. This
addition was designed to be easily tucked
away to provide more work space when it’s
not needed. There’s also a16-channel audio
mixer and plenty of onboard analog/SDI up,
down and crossconversion and frame syncing,
with routable ins and outs.
The new truck also has two nonlinear
edit work areas and plenty of room for the
uplink operator, reporters, photographers
and editors. It’s a true
rolling newsroom.
The final touch on
our new sat truck was
the installation of microwave
transmitting and
receiving capability. This
links with KOAT-TV’s
helicopter and allows us
to beam live video from
the helicopter to the sat
truck for integration into
the live show, or to serve
as a link back to Albuquerque.
AMT did an outstanding
job in the design of the truck from bumper
to bumper. What really makes the truck
stand out is the unique paint job that mirrors
the station’s helicopter and proudly displays
the Zia “sun,” which is the symbol for
the New Mexico state flag and also for the
many Indian tribes that populate the state.
The Zia represents the four times of day, four
seasons, the four compass directions, and
the four stages of life. We feel that this is
very fitting for this beautiful new truck that
will serve as the cornerstone of the KOAT-TV
fleet for years to come.
Gary Williams is director of engineering
at KOAT-TV. He may be contacted at grwilliams@hearst.com.
For additional information, contact Accelerated
Media Technologies at 508-459-
0300 or visit www.acceleratedmt.com.