I’d like to thank Nathan and the team at Wendy’s Broadcadst for all their help. They have been supplying me with custom cables, made to the highest standard over many year. The low profile connectors are hard to find, yet they normally ship the finished leads the day after ordering, often to studios or locations where I am filming and I’ve never had to ask for any adjustments or corrections; They are right first time, despite my requiring some unusual bespoke wiring. I’ve also benefited from real world advice about products and fault finding. Wendy’s Broadcast have made location sound far less stressful.
The DCR822 digital receiver provides the highest level of RF and audio performance available with a versatile feature set in a compact design for field and location production. Settings can be made from the front panel with tactile buttons and LCD interface, making the unit ideal for use in portable bag systems and on sound carts. An RF spectrum analyzer and SmartTune are built into the receiver to alleviate interference problems in an increasingly congested RF spectrum.
The mechanical design of the receiver fits into the same dimensions as the older UCR411A and combines field-proven features developed over many years of experience in motion picture and television production. To decrease weight, the DCR822 provides a dual channel receiver in one unit powered by 4 AA Lithium batteries or external DC. The receiver is also equipped with both an IR port and microSD card slot for data transfer. The machined aluminum housing and panels are surfaced with a hard-anodized finish with laser etched markings to withstand the rigors of field production.
The RF gain stages in the front end use a newly developed design to provide low noise RF amplification, excellent sensitivity and extremely low susceptibility to intermodulation and de-sensitization.
Vector Diversity
An ideal diversity system constructively combines all the energy available at both antennas. Traditional “true diversity” or “ratio diversity” methods use two complete receivers and blend the audio. This works well for FM and Digital Hybrid systems, but falls short of the ideal for today’s all-digital modes. The DCR822’s Vector Diversity subsystem smoothly and continuously combines RF signals from two receiver front ends per channel, with differing phase angles in order to obtain maximum energy. Not only does this method deliver clean, artifact-free performance in all modes, it is actually able to take two signals compromised by multipath interference and reassemble them into a usable signal.
Compatibility
The DCR822 offers compatibility with the D Squared and Duet digital transmitters, including the DBu, DHu, DPr, DCHT, and M2T, and backward compatibility with any Digital Hybrid Wireless® transmitters including the SM and SMWB series, WM, HM Series, MM400 Series, HH Series, LT, LMb, UM400 Series, and SSM.
SmartNRTM
With a noise floor at -120 dBV and a frequency response to 20 kHz, high frequency noise in the source audio is more apparent than in conventional wireless systems. The Smart NR algorithm has three mode. When OFF, no noise reduction is performed. When NORMAL is selected, enough noise reduction is applied to remove most of the hiss from the mic preamp and some of the hiss from lavaliere microphones. When FULL is selected, enough noise reduction is applied to remove most of the hiss from nearly any signal source of reasonable quality, assuming levels are set correctly at the transmitter.
Recording Function
The DCR822 can record received audio on a microSD card, in the industry standard .wav (BWF) file format, at 24 bits, 48 kHz for compatibility with any audio or video editing software.
What's Included
Operating Frequencies (MHz) |
Model A1/B1: 470.100 - 614.375 Model B1/C1: 537.600 - 691.175 |
Frequency Selection Steps | 25 kHz |
Frequency Response | 25 Hz to 20 kHz (+0/-3 dB) |
Frequency Stability | ±0.001 % |
Front end bandwidth | ±5.5 MHz, @ -3 dB |
Sensitivity |
20 dB Sinad: 0.9 uV(-108 dBm), A weighted 60 dB Quieting: 1.12 uV (-105 dBm), A weighted |
AM rejection | >60 dB, 2 uV to 1 Volt |
Modulation acceptance | 85 kHz |
Spurious rejection | 85 dB |
Third order intercept | +15 dBm |
Diversity method | Vector Diversity |
Antenna inputs | Dual SMA female jacks; 50 Ohm impedance |
Audio output | Rear panel 2 TA3M connectors; can drive 600 Ohm, adjustable from -50 to +5 dBu in 1 dB steps (into nominal 10 k bal. load) |
THD | 0.2% (typical) |
SmartNR | No Limiting | w/Limiting |
OFF | 103.5 | 108.0 |
NORMAL | 107.0 | 111.5 |
FULL | 108.5 | 113.0 |
Input Dynamic Range | 125 dB (with full Tx limiting) | |
Overall Latency (time delay) | 1.4 ms with digital source, <2.9 sm with Hybrid TX | |
Audio Test Tone | 1 KHz, -50 to +5 dBu, <1%THD |
Front Panel | • LCD display
• Menu/Sel, Pwr/Back, Up/Down Arrow Buttons • SD Card Reader • IR Port. |
Rear Panel | • Analog/AES audio output jack (2)
• External DC input • Battery compartment • USB port |
External Power | Minumum 9 Volts to maximum 17 VDC
2.5 W; 170 mA at 12 VDC |
Battery Life | 6 hrs. continuous, w/ 4 Lithium AA batteries |
Weight | 408 grams with batteries (14.4 oz.) |
Dimensions | 3.23” wide x 1.23” high x 4.75” deep
82.042 wide x 31.242 high x 120.650 deep mm |
Storage media | microSDHC memory card |
File format | .wav files (BWF) |
A/D converter | 24-bit |
Sampling rate | 48 kHz |
Recording modes/Bit rate | HD mono mode: • 24 bit - 144 kbytes/s • 32 bit - 192 kbytes/s Split gain mode: • 24 bit - 288 kbytes/s • 32 bit - 384 kbytes/s |
Frequency response | 25Hz to 20 kHz; +0/-3 dB |
Dynamic range | 110 dB (A), before limiting |
Distortion | < 0.035% |
Operating temperature range |
Celsius: -20 to 50 Fahrenheit: -5 to 122 |
Using a microSDHC memory card, the approximate recording times are as follows. The actual time may vary slightly from the values listed in the tables.
(HD Mono Mode) | |
Size | Hrs:Min |
8GB | 11:12 |
16GB | 23:00 |
32GB | 46:07 |
*Note: The dual envelope “soft” limiter provides exceptionally good handling of transients using variable attack and release time constants. Once activated, the limiter compresses 30+ dB of transmitter input range into 4.5 dB of receiver output range, thus reducing the measured figure for SNR without limiting by 4.5 dB