Marshall Brings Professional Broadcast Monitors Into Focus At NAB 2023

Marshall Electronics announces the new ML-454-V2 monitor, at NAB 2023. Marshall will also feature its latest lineup of professional broadcast monitors, including the ML-503, ML-702 as well as its V-702W and V-702W-12G models, throughout the show.

New for NAB 2023 is the two-rack unit Quad 4.5” screen ML-454-V2 video monitor with an updated, brighter display. The ML-454-V2 Quad 4.5" Screens LCD display is a feature-packed, economical solution perfect for fly-packs, control rooms, routing rooms and countless other video system applications. Looping video inputs set this product apart from similar-looking products. With the ML-454-V2, users are not limited to the single SDI connector you may find on competitor models. Standard power and tally connections as well as a logical menu structure make this display an easy choice for flexible system designs.

Also on display at NAB 2023 is the ML-503 Triple 5” monitor. The ML-503 uses only two rack units (3.5") and has a tilt mount. It includes 3G-SDI, HDMI and AV inputs, and all digital inputs loop through. These monitors are perfect for fly-packs, control rooms and news vans. Front panel controls give access to all functions. It also has three-color tally lights (red, green and yellow). The ML-702 dual 7" monitor with multiple input types will also be featured at the show. It uses just 5" of rack space (3RU) and has an integral tilt mount. The LCD display features 3G-SDI, HDMI and AV inputs. Digital inputs have active looping outputs. It also has standard power and tally connections, as well as a logical menu structure.

Marshall’s V-702W, which also comes in a 12G-compatible model (V-702W-12G), is a dual 7" LCD professional broadcast monitor with a feature-packed, economical solution perfect for fly-packs, control rooms, routing rooms and countless other video system applications. The V-702W adds multiple analysis functions including Waveform Monitor, Vectorscope, Audio Phase, HDR modes, S-Log conversions and user LUT's (with split-screen comparison), making this monitor a versatile QC platform. The V-702W-12G has all the analysis features of the V-702W but with more audio bars (SDI is 16, HDMI is 8) displayed. The V-702W-12G also includes TC decoding / display, along with very low latency.

The monitors have a slim design and are only 3RU (5") in size. The monitors feature, two 1920 x 1200 bright, colorful displays, as well as several digital inputs: HDMI, 3G-SDI digital inputs with active loop-through (auto selects HDSDI/3G-SDI). The V-702W and V-702W-12G also come with peaking filter, selectable markers and 1:1 pixel mapping; over scan and H/V delay modes. Other features include audio de-embedding and monitoring via front panel headphone jacks, and built-in LED three-color tally indicators.

You might also like...

Automating HDR-SDR Conversion

Automation seems like an obvious solution but effective conversion involves understanding what the image content is and therefore what the priorities are for how it should look.

Live Sports Production: Part 1 - New Sports Production Workflows

Welcome to Part 1 of ‘Live Sports Production’ - This new multi-part series uses a round table style format to explore the technology of live sports production with some of the industry’s leading system designers. It is a fascinating insight i…

Microphones: Part 5 - The Variable Directivity Microphone

The variable directivity microphone is very popular for studio work. What goes on inside is very clever and not widely appreciated.

Deep Learning Accelerates Object Tracking In TV Production

Advances in application motion tracking in audiovisual production, both live and recorded, have been slow until recently accelerated by the advent of modern AI techniques associated with neural network based deep learning and mathematical graph theory. These advances have converged…

The Creative Challenges Of HDR-SDR Simulcast

HDR can make choices easier - or harder - at every stage of production but the biggest challenge may be just how subjective those choices are.