Audio
Engineering is based in North London, with offices in a period house, adjoining
large purpose-built manufacturing facilities. The company has a 30-year
history of developing high performance wireless microphone technology, pioneering
many of the advances seen by the professional audio and broadcast industries.
The company is also highly instrumental in the continuing negotiations with
the regulatory bodies, regarding radio spectrum usage and frequency allocation.
Audio Engineering
benefits from a highly qualified and experienced R&D team, supported by
an abundance of leading-edge research technology. Automated manufacturing
capabilities are complemented by CAD systems and a series of screened rooms,
which provide RF-secure environments for equipment testing. Surface-mount
technology combines with best-practice engineering standards, to ensure
long-lasting products with exemplary performance.
A Brief
History
Founded in 1965, the company has a long pedigree as a specialist supplier
to the film and broadcast industries, launching The Blimp - a lightweight
sound-proof jacket for film cameras - as its first product. A crystal sync
system for film cameras soon followed, accompanied by microphone phantom
power supplies. The development of Micron radio microphone systems commenced
in 1970, with the first units being launched in 1972.
The initial
range included a high-quality wireless microphone with a previously-unheard
degree of acoustic transparency, setting the industry standard for this
type of device. In 1980, Audio Engineering became the first manufacturer
to produce a modular radio microphone rack system, with individual diversity
receivers, spearheading the use of multi-channel diversity systems in television
studios, EFP and theatres.
Development
continued with the introduction of the Micron CNS compander-based diversity
system - first used on the 1984 Barbican production of 'Les Misérables'.
The Micron CNS (Complementary Noise Suppression) System is a key ingredient
in the products' long-standing reputation for sound quality and has been
continually updated and enhanced. Recent Micron developments include the
introduction of frequency-synthesis technology across a variety of wireless
microphone and communications systems, with many featuring a particularly
a wide RF tuning range, plus further expansion of the multi-channel diversity
receiver options for location sound recording and ENG/EFP.
