|
---
30 June 2011, Cleveland Ohio, USA
St. Louis’ historic KFUO-AM (kfuoam.org),
one of the oldest continually-operating AM stations in the US, has
chosen Axia AoIP consoles and routing equipment to power their newly
upgraded studios.
KFUO, a broadcast ministry of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod,
has been on the air serving St. Louis with inspirational programming
since 1924. Their Axia purchase includes two 20-position Element 2.0
mixing consoles with console Call Controller modules for on-board
control of Telos Talkshow systems, PowerStation integrated console
engines, and multiple Axia Audio Nodes (networked interfaces for analog,
AES/EBU and microphone-level audio sources).
The purchase was made through Broadcasters General Store of Ocala,
Florida.
Axia allows broadcasters to quickly and easily build audio networks
using switched Ethernet to connect a few rooms, or an entire facility.
Axia networks have a total system capacity of more than 10,000 audio
streams, and can carry hundreds of digital stereo channels (plus machine
logic and PAD) over a single CAT-6 cable, eliminating much of the cost
normally associated with wiring labor and infrastructure. Axia radio
consoles are a hit, with installations in over 2,000 studios worldwide.
For more information, visit
www.AxiaAudio.com or contact Clark Novak at Axia Audio by email at
cnovak@AxiaAudio.com, or by phone at +1-216-241-7225.
---

Download a print-quality version of this photo from
the Axia photo gallery at www.AxiaAudio.com/pix
.
Axia, a Telos company, builds Ethernet-based professional IP-Audio
products for broadcast, sound-reinforcement and commercial audio
applications. Along with the popular Element 2.0 modular console for
on-air, commercial production, audio workstations and personal studios,
Axia products include the PowerStation integrated console engine,
intercom systems, digital audio routers, DSP mixers and processors, and
software for configuring, managing and interfacing networked audio
systems.
This page:
http://www.AxiaAudio.com/news/pr/2011_KFUO.htm |