PRESS RELEASE
NASA Turns to Video Technics to Digitally Document
Rocket Engine Testing with 48 Channel Apella™ Video
Server System
Atlanta,
GA (February 3, 2011)
– NASA’s Stennis Space Center (SSC) will always be
recognized as the center that tested and proved
flight-worthy the rocket engines and boosters that were
safely used on the lunar space
mission that
brought “a giant leap for mankind.” For over forty
years, SSC has been involved in testing rocket engines
and parts for various missions such as those for the
Apollo and Space Shuttle Programs. Having been involved
in testing for such a long period, the space center
recently began updating much of its rocket engine test
equipment, including its video systems.
This includes
the Apella™ video recording
system that NASA acquired from Video Technics, Inc.

The decision was made to move into digital recording where cameras in
blast resistant
housings film the testing of rockets to
provide a record of the testing events. The cameras on
the test stand provide surveillance for the entire
facility, but are also used during rocket testing, which
has a test cycle that ranges from once or twice a week
to once every two weeks. During a test, cameras feed
video to the 24 video server inputs provided by Video
Technics’ six Apella SDS eight-channel (4 IN / 4 OUT
each) networked servers for a total of 24 record and 24
playback channels.
The Apella™ is a highly scalable, feature-packed
media server built on an IT-centric foundation. Designed
with open architecture and non-proprietary file formats,
VT’s innovative software solutions are future-proofed
and flexible for a variety of applications. Native
support for AVI, MOV, and MXF file formats, real-time
simulcast capability for HD and SD standards, closed
captioning support for 608/708 standards, and
transparent redundancy and failover are just a few of
the server capabilities.
The Apella
SDS offers seamless workflow solutions for content
management and automated multi-channel delivery and can
be easily upgraded to HD.
The Apella is designed to work
with the VT Proxy Editor™ application that provides
frame accurate low-resolution desktop editing
functionality and the ability to render these sequences
as new media files on the server and export them to be
completed in a nonlinear editor.
VT Record™ software is used to apply custom
metadata to each record session and gang multiple
channels together using house time code. A test at
Stennis is recorded for its entire duration, then the
servers are stopped and the video is reviewed to allow
the test team to determine if anything untoward occurred
during the test. If the test was considered successful,
the engineers would use VT Proxy Editor to trim a
sequence and then drag and drop the timeline with media
from the video server to an NLE so that they could add
titles and export the video in a variety of formats.
The Apella SDS servers are HD-
ready and the software codecs can be easily upgraded
with a simple software update.
Rocket engine tests can be expensive and
sometimes impossible to repeat, therefore, it is
necessary to run the solution in parallel by recording
the same camera feeds to multiple channels. This
flexibility in user configuration provides more
redundancy and greater security when needed. In fact,
during a recent test of a new rocket engine, the J2X,
which was tested for 500 seconds, the VT solution
recorded the video from all of the cameras, and captured
all of the digital video.
“We are very proud to have NASA relying on the
quality of our products,” said Andy Tuggle, Vice
President of Sales and Marketing for Video Technics,
“With the Apella SDS, VT Record, and VT Proxy Editor
NASA engineers have the right solution for recording,
managing, and playing back their mission critical media
content.
About Video
Technics, Inc. Video Technics, Inc., a
pioneer in revolutionary systems development, supplies the
global broadcast industry with innovative, feature-rich
workflow solutions built around the company’s IT-based
media servers. Video Technics’ Apella™ and NewsFlow™
products streamline the entire production process, and
feature inherent proxy editing, embedded ingest/playout
tools, and digital asset management. For more information
visit:
www.videotechnics.com.
About Stennis Space
Center
For more than four decades, John C. Stennis Space Center
in south Mississippi has served as NASA’s primary rocket
propulsion testing ground. Today, the center provides
propulsion test services for NASA and the Department of
Defense, as well as the private sector. It also hosts
NASA’s Rocket Propulsion Test Program, which is
responsible for managing all of the agency’s propulsion
test facilities. For more information visit
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/stennis
Why choose
Video Technics?
See Apella Server Overview, Client
Applications Overview, and Storage Overview for more information.
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