WORLD – With bases in the U.S. and UK, rental company Major Tom has continued to work its flexible Optocore Festival Boxes to full capacity in high profile deployments during 2023, none more so than on Ed Sheeranâs extensive Mathematics world tour.
More details from Optocore (www.optocore.com):
The company first invested in the Festival Box point-to-point converter (with 12 SFP modules) back in July 2021. They recognized the advantages of being able to tunnel any audio protocol, as well as video and data, over a single fiber ⊠providing huge time, cost and space efficiencies in multi-act scenarios.
According to Major Tom project manager, Richard Wonnacott, âWe have found [Festival Box] to be incredibly useful. In fact, it has become the solution to almost every problem we encounter connecting one set of equipment to another, some distance away.
âThe key benefits are the flexibility it provides to deal with whatever is thrown at us ⊠not only in a festival situation, with multiple visiting consoles, but also the ability to run comms.â
Which is precisely how Ed Sheeranâs system tech, Adam Wells, has been deploying it on the latest Mathematics world tour.
âFestival Box is the backbone of every show we do,â said Wells. âItâs fundamental to the point where I couldnât do a show without it.â
As a freelance engineer, who has worked for Major Tom for eight years, he was aware of the presence of this Optocore device in their inventory. âI knew it would be absolutely perfect for this tour,â he said. âWhat you plug in is what you get out the other end. It is very intuitive and super easy to use.â The move to deploy it also received the blessing of production director, Chris Marsh.
The original idea had simply been to use it with the tourâs two support band consoles. âBut the demands of our digital loop got bigger and bigger,â he said. âThere were a number of devices, various SD Mini racks at each of the band positions, a DiGiCo Orange Box picking up MADI, a fully loaded SD rack under the stage for all the RF and another SD MINI at FOH, plus a Quantum 7 [console] with two engines.
âIt became obvious that despite the size of the digital loop this wouldnât affect Festival Box at all, and we still have multiple options for connections for support bands.â In addition, by dividing the Box into two logical halves they could achieve full redundancy with A / B connections to every device.
âIt means we can run one snake for the entire show and two support bands plus everything else around it â although itâs with comms that it has really saved the day.â
The use of DiGiCoâs DMI-OPTO card gave production HMA connection and OpticalCon availability, with CAT5 connections for their AVB protocol (in this instance) at either end of the multicore. âWe also run our comms network, which is an IP-based Clear-Com Helixnet and Freespeak, through Festival Box, as well as the switches that also distribute the comms IP network.
âOne thing unique about our show which to my knowledge has not been done before,â continues the system tech, âis the ability to use the passive fiber ports on Festival Box for comms antennas. These are specific wavelengths, essentially giving you more fiber connections. We are using those to distribute Freespeak fiber transceivers under the stage.
âIt was an idea I had because we needed a solution to distribute the four Freespeak transceivers, and we had run out of options with copper. We ended picking up a 1310 nm multimode SPF at either end. It works like a dream and is absolutely rock solid.â
Finally Adam Wells says that aside from Festival Box, Major Tom have enjoyed a good experience with other Optocore devices. âFor instance, on the last Ed tour we used the X6Râs and multiple different units to distribute the fiber network, convert to AES and distribute to our Meyer Sound Galaxy processors.â
As the latest tour concludes, Wells reflects, âThere have been no issues whatsoever with Festival Box, how they have dealt with life on the road.â
While all this was taking place a second Festival Box was being deployed by Major Tom on the âSummer Seriesâ shows, which ran for a fortnight in July in the courtyard at Londonâs Somerset House. Explained Richard Wonnactt, âThe challenge on this site is that the multicore is run in a trench around the edge of the courtyard before the rest of the load in, and then is covered with concession stalls for the duration of the event, making it impossible for any visiting acts to install their own multicores. Also, the entire route is 150m long, which rules out any RJ45 runs, for which we had many requests.
âIt was clear at this point that the only solution was for a Festival Box. It was configured to allow for 6 x RJ45, 2 x OptiCON and 2 x HMA and every one of those ports was used at some point over the two weeks. All worked flawlessly.â