Watch Our 10th Anniversary Video!

10 Years DTV Sound Science
This year, Linear Acoustic celebrates its 10th Anniversary.  Join us on a retrospective journey that chronicles the remarkable decade which begins with our humble beginnings in a New Jersey garage (really!) and pauses for just a moment to celebrate what we have become:  The leading authority on digital television loudness control, metering, and monitoring. 

Linear Acoustic Helps TV Stay CALM

Linear Acoustic was featured in a November 25th, 2011 article by Tim Stuhldreher in the Central Penn Business Journal about the much-talked-about "CALM" (Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation) Act passed by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama: 


Television station managers have no shortage of kind words for Lancaster County's Linear Acoustic Inc."We're really, really pleased with them," said Keith Blaisdell, director of technology at Harrisburg's ABC affiliate, WHTM-TV.


"They make a neat product," said Bob Good, director of operations at WGAL-TV in Lancaster Township, an NBC affiliate. "It's very effective."

Linear Acoustic specializes in sound-control technology for television broadcasters. The company offers "end-to-end solutions," managing sound at every stage from input to transmission, said Christina Carroll, senior vice president of global sales.


It supplies equipment for the Emmy and Oscar broadcasts, the Rose Bowl and the summer and winter Olympics. In January, it won a technical Emmy for real-time audio and metadata processing. Metadata is information that describes the audio signal.

Among Linear Acoustic's signature products is the Aero line of transmission loudness management systems.

Television stations broadcast content from dozens of different sources every day, all in different formats, recorded at different loudness levels. Loudness management systems automatically adjust equalization levels, raising and lowering volume to keep overall sound levels consistent from segment to segment and show to show.

A particular problem is commercials. While most programs have a mix of loud and soft sound, many advertisers record their pitches at near-maximum volume from start to finish.

Even if such a commercial is no louder than the loudest noise in the surrounding program, it subjectively seems louder, because of its longer duration.

Loud commercials have been the No. 1 complaint among viewers about broadcast television, according to the Federal Communications Commission, which tracks complaints and publishes quarterly summaries.

Last December, Congress passed and President Barack Obama signed the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation, or Calm, Act. It empowers the FCC to regulate commercials so they are no louder than the average loudness of the surrounding programming.

Under the CALM Act, the FCC must finalize its loudness rules by Dec. 15. One year later, the rules will take on the force of law.

At that point, stations without loudness management systems will be risking federal sanctions, Good said.

"Eventually the FCC's going to fine stations for loudness," he said.

Complaints to ABC-27 about loud commercials largely disappeared after the station installed Linear Acoustic's equipment, Blaisdell said.

The equipment not only lets stations monitor and manage sound, but also outputs data so they can document their compliance to the FCC, WGAL's Good said.

A few other manufacturers offer loudness management gear, "but we think Linear Acoustic's is the best," Good said.

Linear Acoustic's Aero boxes also convert sound from one format to another on the fly. In particular, they can "upmix" a two-channel stereo feed to 5.1-channel surround sound.

Miking a live event for surround sound is expensive and technically challenging. In many cases, upmixing provides a viable, cost-effective alternative, Carroll said.

Linear Acoustic makes software versions of its products, Carroll said. More and more, the industry is moving away from racks and patch cables toward servers and Ethernet, she said.

Carroll's husband and Linear Acoustic's president is Tim Carroll, a veteran of Dolby Laboratories, the groundbreaking audio technology company. He founded Linear Acoustic in 2002, originally operating out of his New Jersey home.

The company moved to Lancaster in 2004, lured by a $400,000, three-year investment from Ben Franklin Technology Partners, Pennsylvania's state-sponsored tech incubator, which also provided business mentoring.

"It's been an excellent relationship," said Richard Heddleson, director of business development for Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Central and Northern Pennsylvania. He called Linear Acoustic a "storybook example" of Ben Franklin client success.

In 2007, Linear Acoustic merged with Telos Systems, a Cleveland-based maker of audio equipment for radio stations. The Telos Alliance consists of four companies: Telos; Linear Acoustic; Omnia, which makes audio processing equipment; and Axia, which makes broadcast consoles.

Linear Acoustic has 25 full-time staff and four contract workers, Christina Carroll said. Fifteen work out of Lancaster County, where research and development, administration and final product assembly takes place. The rest are based all over the world, Carroll said.

In August, Linear Acoustic moved to 108 Foxshire Drive in Manheim Township, about 2½ miles north of its previous location on North Prince Street in downtown Lancaster.

The standalone building, formerly a Long & Foster real estate office, offers more space and easier parking, Carroll said.

Blaisdell said ABC-27 is delighted to be using "world-class technology that was designed and produced right here in Central Pennsylvania."

"They're doing well," said WGAL's Good, who said the station has ongoing dialogue with Linear Acoustic as sound standards continue to evolve.

"I think they're an up-and-coming company."

What Users Are Saying

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Having great 5.1 surround sound accompany HD pictures is a necessity with an even of this magnitude.  The Linear Acoustic e-squared system was one  of the multichannel audio paths used for distributing the programs for broadcast.  This is one of the most watched broadcasts in the world, with entertainment moments that are preserved for history, so audio quality and reliability were critical for us.


Tad Scripter

Engineer in Charge for the 81st Academy Awards


Our AERO.air was installed and placed into service this past April.  The unit integrated seamlessly with our existing equipment, and I’ve certainly been impressed with the overall quality of the 5.1 surround sound it provides.  If that weren’t enough, viewer concerns over commercial loudness have been virtually eliminated and we are now prepared as the CALM Act passed into law.

 

Moreau Dugas

Engineering Operation Manager

WSVN-TV


The Linear Acoustic AERO.one is definitely one of the easiest-to-set-up pieces of audio processing gear I have ever experienced.  Plus, it sounds great with little or no effort.  Having been in the business for 40-plus years, I have seen my share of audio processing and this unit, by far, is my favorite.  It “fixes” the levels the network sends us in a very pleasant way and makes the viewers very happy.

 

Tom Bondurant

Director of Engineering

WAPT-TV


Modern digital broadcast audio such as 5.1 surround sound and its metadata have made QC monitoring extremely important to our operations.  In our move to a digital environment, we needed an advanced solution that would appropriately adjust metering and playback audio levels throughout the entire broadcast chain.  We chose the Linear Acoustic LAMBDA based on an expectation of excellent audio quality, and that is exactly what we see.  We’ve had the units in place for several months, and they have provided exceptional performance across all three of our channels.

 

Gene Talley

Director of Engineering/Operations

WPBT-TV


Our viewer complaints concerning audio immediately went to ZERO, and we sound great.   Not much more to say besides today digital stations just plain need one.


Brady Dreasler

QNI


Like many broadcasters, we experienced a lot of problems with varying audio levels for network and local programming, particularly during playout of news and sports.  We needed a way to address this discrepancy in loudness levels and even out audio volume, and the Linear Acoustic AERO.air has proven to be a wonderful solution.  We noticed a significant difference immediately upon implementing the processor, and we haven’t received any comments about disparities in audio loudness since.

 

Brent Robinson, Chief Engineer

KSL 5-TV


KMOV has been using the AERO.air (5.1) for two months and we are very happy with the results.  The quality of our audio signal improved noticeably when we placed the unit on the air.  The 5.1 channel synthesizing and audio levling is substantially better than with our previous device.  The internal audio/video frame synchronizer function completely cleans up the signal and has corrected a problem with incompatible audio frames on switches.  Linear Acoustic did everything possible to ensure that the installation and configuration was correct for our particular needs.  I could not be more pleased with the company or the product.  

 

Walt Nichol

Director of Technology, Broadcast Media

KMOV-TV St. Louis

The LAMBDA is a top-shelf piece of gear.  It is definitely the future of broadcast facility audio monitoring.

 

Joey Gill

Chief Engineer

WPSD-TV


After switching our Comcast channel delivery from analog to digital, we discovered that our audio levels were out of control and we had cracking and popping that we could not resolve, causing viewer complaints every day.  We called Linear Acoustic, and they offered to locate and fix the problem for us, leave the equipment in for us to try, and for a very affordable price - a no brainer.  Wow!  No more complaints from the viewers or the boss - just perfect audio at all times, and in full-time 5.1.

 

Jan Strock

Director of Engineering

WHTM-TV


AERO.max 5.1 is IMPRESSIVE and although I am far passed being able to be impressed, I am with this gadget.  The fact that we were able to easily insert our EAS as well was icing on the cake.  We put it online with an external Dolby 569 encoder and last night I watched at home with my wife.  Wow!  The 5.1 is at the output all the time, simulated when local stereo is used, and passed as 5.1 from the network when available.  The leveling makes transition between local and network material seamless, and I do not hear (or see) my Onkyo receiver switching surround modes during the breaks either.  It has provided WJCT a very uniform and constant off-air sound and fixed dialnorm settings no matter where the material is coming from.  FABULOUS gadget.

 

Duane Smith

Director of Technology

WJCT-TV and FM


We own two AERO.air (DTV) units and are extremely pleased with their performance.  Both units were easy to configure and have provided reliable processing and level control.  We also selected these units for the ease of 5.1-to-stereo downmix.  We have agreed to supply our cable providers a direct SD feed for several more years.  This downmix ability provides us with a single platform solution for both our HD and SD feeds.  We monitor all feeds with our LAMBDA monitoring unit.  It gives us a good handle on our 5.1 processing and the dialnorm of any feed on our wideband router.

 

Jay Nix

Director of Engineering

KSHB-TV


Our loudness control problems have virtually ceased thanks to the AERO.air (5.1).  The LAMBDA is a very powerful (and cool) box.  I still need to teach myself how to use it to its fullest potential and hope to add the AC-3 option later this year which will make it a huge addition to my troubleshooting arsenal.  

 

Prentiss Laird

Engineering Technical Manager

CBS 42 KEYE

Having the UPMAX with us in Beijing this past summer was like adding a new friend to the crew.  The sound was a nice improvement, and the support from Linear Acoustic was superb.  We are still learning about new ways to use UPMAX, and I look forward to using it and working with Linear Acoustic again in Vancouver.

 

Bob Dixon

NBC Universal