The backstory of how I've been invited to The Weather Channel 30 year reunion this weekend

No, I won’t be meeting Heidi Cullen.

30 years ago, on May 2nd, 1982, a new satellite channel debut made history. TWC went online thanks to the work of dozens of pioneering meteorologists and technicians, including my friends John Coleman and Joe D’Aleo.

This is my personal story, never before told here.

I had a small part in supporting TWC in the early days, though some technology I developed, which I’ll talk more about later. But first, the launch of TWC. Here’s the pre-launch ceremony from Las Vegas and Atlanta (30 minutes) followed by the first 30 minutes of the Weather Channel’s broadcast from Sunday, May 2, 1982:

I was invited to the 30th reunion, which is being held this weekend, due to the fact that I myself was an early pioneer in weather technology for television, and TWC was one of my early customers using what was then some “revolutionary” technology I developed.

Few people who read WUWT know this, but I developed the first ever interface to allow computer weather graphics done on the IBM-XT @4.77Mhz, and later the IBM-AT @ 6.0 Mhz, to be broadcast on television. This was no small feat, because back then, such devices were usually rack mounted dedicated boxes. Using a dual slot frame buffer card from an early CAD/CAM terminal company called Vectrix, I designed the first ever PC based broadcast quality RGB to NTSC encoder card for the IBM-PC platform.

I’ve kept a sample of each piece of technology, which I photographed this morning on my desk. Here’s the complete solution, the dual slot frame buffer card, plus my NTSC encoder card:

The other half of the frame buffer card (not shown, underneath) is nothing more than rows and rows of 64K DIP memory chips. This ISA buss full length dual card was driven by an Intel 80188 CPU  with a command set programmed to take ASCII commands (over a parallel or serial port) like [draw pixel, x,y] It was crude by today’s standards, but revolutionary then. Today, any cheap PC video card for $49 will run circles around what you see above.

Notice the long white ceramic chip in the upper left of the frame buffer card. That’s the heart of the graphics engine, the NEC 7220 graphics display controller chip, one of the first graphic chips ever invented. It allowed us to do things never before done outside of mainframes and was designed to be the heart of this beast, the NEC APC Advanced Personal Computer. 

The trick to making the NEC7220 produce broadcastable RS170A (NTSC) video came with a mandatory need for something called “genlock“, which allowed all devices in a TV studio to be synchronized into a common switcher, so that video effects like green screen chroma key (essential to TWC) could be done.

Making the NEC7220 do genlock, was no easy task, since it had never been designed to do that job, and had no sync input of any kind. The task was something I took up, because I wanted to open up the IBM-PC to the world of broadcasting. When TWC started, they were using Z80 CPU/S-100 buss based Cromemco Z2 rack mount beasts with a 16 color frame buffer card done with an external rack-mounted NTSC encoder. The price tag on these things with software, broadcast encoder, and training was easily $30,000.

Cromemco (named for CROthers MEMorial Hall – the Stanford residence where the founders lived), came into existence in the mid 1970s, and grew to become a major player in the S-100 business systems market. Check out the dual 360K floppy drives whoo! More here.

The Z2 was adopted by Terry Kelly of Weather Central in Wisconsin to broadcast some of the very first weather graphics supplied by WSI corporation. The did custom programming (in BASIC no less) to enable some of the very first weather graphics to be displayed on TV, prior to that, we had Alden Fax images and magnetic symbols on metal boards. I used such a setup in 1978 when I first started in TV and I salivated over computer graphics. One time I tried to adapt an early Apple IIc computer for use on TV and in 1979 I called up Apple and asked to speak to the “chief engineer” about the video output quality. It wasn’t until a  few years later that I realized I had given Steve Wozniak himself an earful about video signal engineering. I still remember the sound of the little floppy drive after typing in PR#6 from the console to get it to read the disk.

So when the IBM-PC came out, with a standardized and smaller buss, plus open sourced technical documentation (unlike Apple who with the Mac in 1984 created a tech prison) it made sense to try to make a broadcast system out of it. The broadcast video encoder was the big hurdle, and I solved it with this card below:

Note all the analog circuitry. There were delay lines (the big copper coiled tube is a 400 nanosecond delay line to match the 3.58 Mhz chroma subcarrier to the luminance signal) filters, scads of bypass caps to keep the noise down, plus subassembly chips and boards that were NTSC composite and RGB signal distribution amplifiers respectively. That plus a phase locked loop on the NE564 chip design that kept the clock of the VX384 frame buffer card in sync with studio gen-lock signals. It was analog black magic, all hand-made and hand-soldered.

Tuning this card was not unlike trying to tune the SU carburetors on a British Leyland Jaguar V-12. I had 12 trimpots plus a trimcap that had to be adjusted “just right”. Setup was accomplished using a TV monitor, an oscilloscope, and several test points on the card and usually took about two hours to get right. In those days, component drift could be a problem, and if you didn’t get the card up to temperature in the chassis first, you could miss the sweet spot and you’d lose genlock…which is a disaster on air in chroma-key when the satellite picture behind the talent in front of the green screen would go wonky.

Tech savvy readers might have noticed the “breadboard” area of the NTSC encoder board I designed. There was a reason for that, thanks to the Grass Valley Group corporation, whose GVG broadcast production switchers had nuances that required me to adjust the blanking signal in the RS170A output in order to get properly horizontally phased gen-lock at some TV studios.

Grass Valley Group model 200 video switcher
The "death ray lever" for Star Wars - GVG 1600 video production switcher, circa 1978, KRON-TV Photo: Roy Trumbull

[Trivia Sidebar: most people don’t know this, but the scene in the first Star Wars movie in 1977 where they fire the “death ray” from the Death Star, show a scene with a hand pulling a lever…it is actually a T-handle from a GVG model 1600 video switcher as seen above, and I think it was filmed at the studios of KGO TV by the ILM/Lucas crew]

So, I’d often have to add a switched delay line, and that breadboard section allowed me to do that on-site if need be. Yes, I’d tweak these systems onsite with a portable oscilloscope, wire wrap, a soldering pencil, and my wits.

Both WSI corporation and Accu-Weather used weather display systems I designed for them in the 80’s and 90’s. That little NTSC broadcast encoder board enabled hundreds of TV stations to put weather graphics on the air.

So, enough about the technology. The point is that John Coleman and Joe D’Aleo, who made TWC happen, thought my contribution to early TV weather and TWC was significant enough that they invited me to attend, even though I was never on the air at TWC, though back then it was a dream I had. I thank them for the gracious invitation.

I’ll be attending the TWC 30 year reunion this weekend, and reporting on this once and only event here at WUWT becuase I feel it is important to document this unique piece of American history. I’ll be traveling to Atlanta tomorrow, for the meeting Saturday. Blogging will be light the next couple of days.

I generally don’t like to beg, but all of the travel and lodging is out of pocket, and my “big oil” check still isn’t in the mail, so if anyone feels like hitting the tip jar (orange “donate” button) on the right sidebar, I will be most grateful.

If anyone has any questions about how TWC got started and operated they’d like me to ask while I’m there, feel free to leave a comment.

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u.k.(us)
April 26, 2012 5:38 pm

Gosh dang it, when Anthony has fun, it lights up the board.

2soonold2latesmart
April 26, 2012 5:41 pm

Also sent along a small donation.
I hope you enjoy the event.
I also built my own first personal computers in the late 70s and early 80s.
First one was based on a Signetics 2650 chip, which was a bit of an orphan at the time as there was not that much software around for it. Initially it used cassette audio tape for input/output, but I designed and built a floppy disk and later a hard disk interface for it.
The next one was a cloned Apple II – there were several sources of bare motherboards and BIOS ROMs around for it, and the rest was just parts to acquire.

Keith Pearson, formerly bikermailman, Anonymous no longer
April 26, 2012 6:21 pm

So, I’m not the only one with a box or two of old parts, SWEARING I’ll build something useful out of them later? Seriously, very cool story, along with Willis’…somewhat different ones. Consider the tip jar hit!

April 26, 2012 6:25 pm

Great post Anthony. It brought back a ton of memories. TWC would have been nothing without the technology that allowed our computer satellite, radar, maps and all the rest to go in chroma key so the On Camera Meteorologists could point out the features and explain what was happening. I look forward to saying Thank You this weekend.
One thing your post did not make clear is that this event is not an official Weather Chan nel event. I don’t even know if those who own and run the bussiness today give a wit about another year. This is a Reunion of the Pioneers on the occasion of the end of 30 years on the air. Over 80 of the 150 of us who took the Weather Channel from concept to reality are gathering in our senior years to remember this event which for most of us was the greatest accomplishment of our lives. That night of May 2nd, 1082 was certainly the biggest night of my life.
And as for The Weather Channel today….
…..Your smart phone app makes for excellen competition.

April 26, 2012 6:48 pm

I always suspected you were a ‘Renaissance dude’!
It is the myopic specialization of modern climate science that I find so terrifying.
A broad perspective is an excellent plataform from which to view the Global Warming Scare.
On the Warmist side no one takes an Interdiscipllnary approach…which is why their position is often an absurd hotch-potch of contradictions.
I’ve got some science, some engineering and technology, some history and some media experience. From those multiple perspectives CAGW just never stacked up.
I

April 26, 2012 7:00 pm

Please remember: 63% of TV Mets are skeptical of CAGW. We would enjoy meeting other Skeptics like us at ICCC conventions. ICCC convention is in MAY. May is a ratings book. So we cannot attend…sigh.

Robert of Ottawa
April 26, 2012 7:01 pm

Charles Gerrard Nelson,
Unfortunately, it is the myopic concentration upon the need for govenment funds that fuels “The Science”; otherwise, I am total agreement with your sentiments.
AGW is a lieing fraud, perpetrated by lieing fraudsters. The case against natural variation has never been made. The lieing fraudsters simply wave their arms in the air and that’s it. It’s called the NULL hypothesis, guys & gals. Disprove that the current weather & “climate” variation are “unnatural”.

Steve O
April 26, 2012 7:15 pm

It’s remarkable to me that the early pioneer, TWC, survived through 30 years of broadcasting, and a series of revolutions in technology.

UnfrozenCavemanMD
April 26, 2012 7:16 pm

Mr. Watts, thank you for the history lesson. I salute your old-school tech cred. You are most definitely the real deal. The world was lucky to have you then. We are still very lucky to have this beacon of yours, shining in the interwebs.
I found the ad for Kodachrome film (RIP) during the Weather Channel’s first broadcast hour particularly poignant. You revived my old memory of 1978 when I worked for a small software house developing TRS-80 software. It was my Summer job between high school and college.
One Summer afternoon in Lexington, MA, my TRS-80 was hit by lightning (true!) which blew up the monitor (the flyback transformer was a bubbling blob of slag), but the computer survived unscathed, and so did I. So, I had to rig an RF modulator to an old Zenith black-and-white TV rescued from the junkyard as a display. Pure analog. Not nearly as advanced as your project. Worked great, if you tuned the trimpots just right.
Still does.
(That was the last of 4 very close calls with lightning in my teens. I NEVER want to be that close again. I am still a little phobic, but remain a weather enthusiast.)

April 26, 2012 8:12 pm

John Coleman says:
April 26, 2012 at 6:25 pm
Great post Anthony. It brought back a ton of memories. ……That night of May 2nd, 1082 was certainly the biggest night of my life.
And as for The Weather Channel today….
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I’m sorry, but I’ve got to say it; “1082”? Does that mean that Mann was also invited since he was channeling trees back then?
Enjoy your reunion.
“And as for The Weather Channel today….”
News from MSNBC?! WUWA?! I sent them a comment saying, “I’m not his wife. I don’t want ‘Wake Up With Al!'”. In the morning I turn it on and mute it. I unmute for “your weather on the 8s” at the bottom of the hour to tell when it’s time to leave for work. Thanks for what you’ve done. Not all of it is gone.

Steve Garcia
April 26, 2012 8:44 pm

May 2, 1982 was the same DAY I moved into the house I live in. I signed up for cable and caught that, evidently. Somehow it didn’t register that it was their first day moving in, too.
Steve Garcia

Steve Garcia
April 26, 2012 8:50 pm

Anthony, you not only are The Man, you Were the Man. Very impressive! Thanks for waking us through it. It’s scary that I actually understood about 25% of what you wrote.
Steve Garcia

April 26, 2012 10:12 pm

Sorry… just for fun …
After watching the video, I wondered if Anthony’s was the only surviving moustache. 🙂
(insert comment about another effect of gobal warming)

u.k.(us)
April 26, 2012 10:20 pm

I made the mistake of visiting “feet2thefire”.
I won’t make that mistake again.
WOW.

Richards in Vancouver
April 26, 2012 10:28 pm

Ye gods, Lucas electrics. My first car was a yellow Morris Minor convertable. In rain at night I dreaded stop signs and lights, because the car would die….UNLESS I could open my door and slam it shut fast enough. Then it would come right back!
Old joke: Why do the Brits drink warm beer? Because Lucas makes their refrigerators.

Joanie
April 26, 2012 10:33 pm

Have a great trip, Anthony. I kicked in a bit. Wasn’t enough, it’s never proportionate to the value that you give every day, but it’s something. Go and clink some glasses and talk old times with people who shared them.

April 26, 2012 10:48 pm

Donation done. Worth every cent.
Your story takes me back to my days messing about with data acquisition circuitry. I made the mistake of selecting an S100 bus system and MP/M as the OS. The IBM PC was very new and I was getting conflicting advice from the “gurus”. Went on to become a fan of PC compatibles and bought my own NEC APC – brilliant technology for the times. Taught CAD and other stuff on it.
Hope the weekend goes well Anthony. I have to run underground power 130m to my water pump – what a bore :-).

April 26, 2012 11:17 pm

Reblogged this on Climate Ponderings and commented:
Pioneers.

Mike Alger
April 26, 2012 11:33 pm

Glad to make a donation, Anthony. Just wish it could be more. Have a great time!

Richards in Vancouver
April 26, 2012 11:42 pm

I too seem to be donating to SurfaceStations, which I am happy and honoured to do. It’s the only button I can see, so I hope it helps you on your trip.
And remember, you can paint the town red. Painting weather screens white has already been done!
[Thanks. It all goes to the same place. ~dbs, mod.]

paullm
April 26, 2012 11:43 pm

What a nostalgic trip! Kept me up tonight. A tip of the hat to one great and deserving engineering, weather, climate, internet, etc. pioneer. Congratulations. And with so much to do yet….. Enjoy Atlanta and look forward to getting the scoop.

Steve C
April 26, 2012 11:46 pm

That’s a very impressive bit of video circuit work. Brings back happy memories of the “good ol’ days” when you could actually see and work on electronics, before the whole lot disappeared into postage-stamp sized chips. I reckon you’ve earned that reunion ticket – have a good one.

April 27, 2012 12:59 am

I’m still remember the day we un packed our Grass Galley 200 at the edit suite where I used to work in London. Two mix effect banks, loads of pattern wipes and a downstream keyer. Because the generation loss on 1 inch video tape was so noticeable as it was an analogue format the GVG200 meant that I could do really complicated video effects in a single pass without having to lose any quality. On one occasion I can recall using 14 play-in video machines and a dual channel Questech DVE into the GVG200 for a single effect! Of course I can pretty much achieve the same sort of thing on my iPad now.

James Bull
April 27, 2012 1:05 am

In the late seventies I was doing my apprenticeship and one of the things I learned was how to tune, set up and balance SU carbs most would be a doddle and others needed a bit more work, the worst were those spect for the US emitions regs which seemed to foul them up completely you could never get them to tune right till you had removed or disabled one or two of the “extras” then all was well.
As for old tech my youngest son is desperate to get hold of my old Atari in its box in the loft.
Left a bit in the jar (will be in my wife’s name)
James Bull

Colonial
April 27, 2012 1:11 am

Anthony,
You should have used an Amiga — it did video natively!
Congratulations on the invite. I’ve added some coins to the bucket. Enjoy hobnobbing with friends old and new.