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Establishing SCM: a standard Scale for Confidence Monitoring

Establishing SCM: a standard Scale for Confidence Monitoring 2

In a recent article called Confidence: What it means in audio/video production, I defined the concept of confidence in monitoring. Having done that, the purpose of this article is to establish a tough scale to apply to both audio/video devices and for systems. This new standard SCM (Standard for Confidence Monitoring) takes into account multiple factors including purposes and goals, noticeable latency, visual indicators, pre-monitoring, e-to-e monitoring, and the modern equivalent of a confidence head for today’s solid state recording.

In a recent article called Confidence: What it means in audio/video production, I defined the concept of confidence in monitoring. Having done that, the purpose of this article is to establish a tough scale to apply to both audio/video devices and for systems. This new standard SCM (Scale for Confidence Monitoring) takes into account multiple factors including purposes and goals, noticeable latency, visual indicators, pre-monitoring, e-to-e monitoring, and the modern equivalent of a confidence head for today’s solid state recording.

Link to prior article

Here is a link to the prior article Confidence: What it means in audio/video production, where some terms used in this article were first defined.

An abbreviation for our Scale for Confidence Monitoring

At least in the English language, I see no better abbreviation for our Scale for Confidence Monitoring than SCM, despite the following preexisting uses of this acronym:

Organizations

Science and technology

Computing

Other uses

Evidently, none of the above examples had any exclusivity of the SCM abbreviation, so we are certainly not changing that fact by using it ourselves 🙂

100 rating on the SCM: the confidence monitoring utopia

Although the confidence monitoring utopia may not yet be available with current technology, it should absolutely be our ultimate goal when establishing our standard Scale for Confidence Monitoring. At the utopian 100 SCM, we would have zero latency monitoring of the modern equivalent of the confidence head, where we actually get to hear —and/or see— the result after the recording has been successfully taken place and immediately played back.

0 (zero) rating on the SCM: no confidence at all

Zero (o) represents no confidence at all: no headphone output for audio; no VU or similar audio indication; no viewfinder (like the Hasselblad cameras used in the Apollo 11 mission, according to the public information released by NASA and Hasselblad).

When we have zero confidence, we are shooting or recording without any assurance at all that we are recording, aimed properly, framed properly, in focus, or whether or not we are getting pops as a result of sibilance.

50 rating on the SCM: some pre-monitoring

With a 50 rating on the SCM, we get some pre-monitoring, be it:

When we have a 50 rating on the SCM, we know that the microphone or camera has power, is properly aimed/framed, whether or not we have pops resulting to sibilance, and whether or not the image is in focus. However, we have no guaranty that the signal is being recorded at all, let alone properly.

75 rating on the SCM: The VU or e-to-e output of a recorder or camcorder, with REC indication

In addition to everything that we get with a 50 rating as indicated above, with a 75 rating on the SCM, we also get more confidence that the signal is actually reaching the recorder, and a higher notion that a recording is actually taking place due to the recording light or advancement of a counter. However, it is still possible that a malfunction might prevent the recording from taking place, due to any potential failure in the recorder or recording medium.

90 rating on the SCM: The equivalent of a confidence head output, although with latency

Although there is up to 12 seconds of latency, the 702 portable audio recorder from Sound Devices essentially offers the equivalent of a modern confidence head, for us to be absolutely sure that the recording took place properly. It currently costs US$2,049.

Graphic credit for this article

The Confidence Level graphic by Vic used in the prior article (and by reference in this one) is used under a Creative Commons CC by 2.0 license. I created the SCM graphic for this article.

Conclusions for SCM version 1.0

As indicated in this article, the SCM can be applied to:

In the case of a complete system, i.e. microphones which feed a preamp/A-to-D converter which feeds a computer… or a camera feeding a recorder, the SCM rating of each can blend to give us a systematic SCM rating. For example, a digital microphone with only a SCM 50 rating, when combined with a computer with recording software that on its own offers a 75 rating via its meter and recording indication can then achieve a systematic rating of a higher number like 80, especially if you want to avoid the latency and therefore prefer to monitor from the mic or hardware interface which offers latency-free monitoring, but can at least see the meter and recording indications on screen.

This article represents my implementation of SCM version 1.0. I may need to revise it in the future, either due to my own evolution, and/or from suggestions from readers. In the meantime, I’ll be using SCM version 1.0 to rate new devices and systems.

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My latest book (paperback + ebook)

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In English, it’s The Castilian Conspiracy. Click here and you will be automatically sent to the closest Amazon book page to you based upon your IP address. Or request ISBN–10: 1456310232 or ISBN–13: 978–1456310233 in your favorite local bookstore.

En castellano, se llama La conspiración del castellano. Haz clic aquí para llegar al instante a la página del libro correspondiente a tu zona y moneda en Amazon, según tu dirección IP. De lo contrario, solicítalo en tu librería preferida con los ISBN–10: 1492783390 ó el ISBN–13: 978–1492783398.

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No manufacturer is specifically paying Allan Tépper or TecnoTur LLC to write this article or the mentioned books. Some of the other manufacturers listed above have contracted Tépper and/or TecnoTur LLC to carry out consulting and/or translations/localizations/transcreations. Many of the manufacturers listed above have sent Allan Tépper review units. So far, none of the manufacturers listed above is/are sponsors of the TecnoTur programs, although they are welcome to do so, and some are, may be (or may have been) sponsors of ProVideo Coalition magazine. Some links to third parties listed in this article and/or on this web page may indirectly benefit TecnoTur LLC via affiliate programs.

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