There seems to be a lack of broadcast engineering discussion forums online, so this new forum is a good initiative... let's give it a try.
I'm designing a low-cost HD live-switching system for a church; we'll be using 3 HVX200 cameras and the Panasonic AV-HS400 switcher with component HD option. For wiring, instead of messing with out-of-budget multicore, triax or fiber cables, I'll be taking a premade snake which runs multiple 3GHz coax, audio, and power wires.
What I want to figure out is tally light support. The Datavideo TB5 (http://www.datavideo.us/products/TB_5_main_page.htm) or its rackmount brother, the RP-7, is a complete kit that takes a D-Sub connector from a switcher and includes 4 tiny strap-mounted tally lights (model TD1) that I can put on the cameras, all ready to go. The question is, will it work?
- The AV-HS400 has a D-sub 15-pin connector with 8 pins labled IN1-IN8 that are tally outputs(?), an Enable signal, and a common ground. The maximum supported dielectric strength is 24VDC and 50mA. [Diagram]
- The TB5 is designed to connect to Datavideo's own switcher, and they were unwilling to reveal its electrical characteristics, so all I have is the switcher's pinout and basic diagram.
- I intend to run the signal through 150 ft. of 26 AWG (7x34) Stranded TC wire, rated at 38.5 Ω/Mft.
I can easily make the right D-Sub cable to accommodate the pinouts, but I want it to work, and I don't want to overload anything... It seems to me like the TB5 takes data signals and applies power to drive the LEDs, while the AV-HS400 is designed to drive small lights directly. I'd appreciate your insight.