Katana VentraIP

Broadcast engineering

Broadcast engineering or radio engineering is the field of electrical engineering, and now to some extent computer engineering and information technology, which deals with radio and television broadcasting. Audio engineering and RF engineering are also essential parts of broadcast engineering, being their own subsets of electrical engineering.

"Radio engineering" redirects here. Not to be confused with Radio-frequency engineering.

Occupation

Broadcast engineer

Broadcast design engineer
Broadcast systems engineer
Broadcast IT engineer
Broadcast IT systems engineer
Broadcast network engineer
Broadcast maintenance engineer
Video broadcast engineer
TV studio broadcast engineer
Outside broadcast engineer

Remote broadcast engineer

Technical knowledge, Management skills, Professionalism

Broadcast engineering involves both the studio and transmitter aspects (the entire airchain), as well as remote broadcasts. Every station has a broadcast engineer, though one may now serve an entire station group in a city. In small media markets the engineer may work on a contract basis for one or more stations as needed.[1]

Duties[edit]

Modern duties of a broadcast engineer include maintaining broadcast automation systems for the studio and automatic transmission systems for the transmitter plant. There are also important duties regarding radio towers, which must be maintained with proper lighting and painting. Occasionally a station's engineer must deal with complaints of RF interference, particularly after a station has made changes to its transmission facilities.[2][3]

Broadcast

design engineer

Broadcast Integration Engineer

Broadcast

systems engineer

Broadcast engineer

IT

Broadcast systems engineer

IT

Broadcast

network engineer

Broadcast

maintenance engineer

broadcast engineer

Video

broadcast engineer

TV studio

engineer

Outside broadcast

engineer

Remote broadcast

Broadcast engineers may have varying titles depending on their level of expertise and field specialty. Some widely used titles include:

Degree in

electrical engineering

Degree in

electronic engineering

Degree in

telecommunications engineering

Degree in

computer engineering

Degree in

management information system

Degree in broadcast technology

Digital engineering[edit]

The conversion to digital broadcasting means broadcast engineers must now be well-versed in digital television and digital radio, in addition to analogue principles. New equipment from the transmitter to the radio antenna to the receiver may be encountered by engineers new to the field. Furthermore, modern techniques place a greater demand on an engineer's expertise, such as sharing broadcast towers or radio antennas among different stations (diplexing).


Digital audio and digital video have revolutionized broadcast engineering in many respects.[4] Broadcast studios and control rooms are now already digital in large part, using non-linear editing and digital signal processing for what used to take a great deal of time or money, if it was even possible at all. Mixing consoles for both audio and video are continuing to become more digital in the 2000s, as is the computer storage used to keep digital media libraries. Effects processing and TV graphics can now be realized much more easily and professionally as well.


With the broadcast industry's shift to IP-based production and content delivery technology not only the production technology and workflows are changing, but also the requirements for broadcast engineers, which now include IT and IP-networking knowhow.[5]


Other devices used in broadcast engineering are telephone hybrids, broadcast delays, and dead air alarms. See the Glossary of electrical and electronics engineering for further explanations.

SET – Sociedade Brasileira de Engenharia de Televisão e Telecomunicações, Brazilian Society of Television and Telecommunications Engineering, , Brazil.

Rio de Janeiro

Broadcast Beat

(formerly BE Radio)

Radio

Radio World

TV Technology

Engineering technician

Technical operator