MoseleyAssociatesInc
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Moseley Associates, Inc.
Data Sheets *LPE-10 FM Exciter. page 1, page 2. Contributed by Mark Humphrey.
Remote Control Timeline Moseley was a major supplier of transmitter remote controls. Here's a brief list of the ones I worked on.
- WRC-32 - I'm not sure of the model number on this one. It was vacuum tube based. It had a telephone dial to select channels and a stepper switch at the transmitter site. Control was done with tones. Step and reset were done by interrupting a single tone with the telephone dial. Metering was DC over the phone line.
- PBR-15 - This replaced the telephone dial with a set of push buttons and digital counters. Pushing a button resulted in a tone interruption (reset), followed by a series of pulses emulating a telephone dial. The transmitter site continued to use a stepper for channel selection. Metering was audible FM (voltage to frequency converter) over the telephone line or subaudible over AM or SCA. I seem to recall a DC metering module was also available.
- TRC-15A - This replaced the stepper at the transmitter site with individual relays. Otherwise, it was similar to the PBR-15. Metering was either audible or subaudible voltage to frequency.
- DRS-1A - This was a modem and UART based system. On the metering side, the voltage to frequency converter of previous systems was replaced with a digital panel meter. The digital output of this was formatted and sent to a UART, then to a modem for transmission to the studio. Similarly, button presses at the studio were translated to signals for the UART driving a modem to the transmitter site.
- MRC series - This was the first microprocessor based remote control system by Moseley.
Manuals
MRC-1 Remote Control System (1980)
- Quick Reference Cards
- Remote Terminal - 75MB
- Remote Terminal (another copy) 86MB
- Power Fail Memory Option
- CIP-2 Command Interface Panel. 1980. 5MB
- PCL-303/C Composite STL. 1968. 13MB
- PBR-21A 15 channel remote control. 1966. 17MB
*SCG-4T Subcarrier Generator, 1972 - 1.7MB
- SCG-6/SCD-6 Subcarrier System. 1968. 2.8MB
- TGR-340 Audio Gain Rider was designed to automatically ride gain on a program line, providing maximum modulation on a long-term basis, with a minimum of audible or measurable byproducts. Contributed by Tom Osenkowsky. Scanned by Gary Blau. 1979. 4.6MB
*TRC-15A remote control system. about 1975 - 12.3M
Other *GE Quadraphonic - Jim Tonne has contributed photos and history of the development of quadraphonic transmission equipment for General Electric by Moseley Associates.
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