Ikegami
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Ikegami Tsushinki Co., Ltd. (池上通信機株式会社 Ikegami Tsūshinki Kabushiki-gaisha?) (TYO: 6771 ) is a Japanese manufacturer of professional and broadcast television equipment, especially professional video cameras, both for ENG and studio use. The company was founded in 1946.
- Most noted of Ikegami's achievements in broadcast television technology was its introduction of the first portable hand-held TV camera. The camera made its debut in the United States in May 1962, when CBS used it to document the launching of NASA's Aurora 7 manned space flight. Ikegami continued in the development of portable video camera technology and in 1972 introduced the HL-33, the first compact hand-held color video camera for ENG. The compact ENG cameras made live shots easier and - when combined with portable videotape recorders - provided an immediate alternative to 16mm television news film, which required processing before it could be broadcast. The later HL-51 was popular among broadcasters for both ENG and EFP image acquisition.
- Although Ikegami is known as a manufacturer of high-quality television cameras, the company does not make video recorder mechanisms-VTR and is a licensee of professional video formats like: (Sony's Betacam SP and DVCAM formats as well as Panasonic's DVCPRO). In 1995 Ikegami co-operated with Avid on a non-linear video acquisition format called Editcam. However, few have been sold.
Some Ikegami Models included the ITC (Industrial Television Camera)-730, HL-79 HL-55, HL-V55 and HL-99. Ikegami makes a full line of SDTV and HDTV TV cameras.
Many of the model numbers of Ikegami portable television cameras begin with the initial letters "HL", which stand for "Handy-Looky". This was deemed an appropriate counterpart to the "Walky-Talky".