WORKERS ENTER FINAL PHASE OF CONSTRUCTION ON WORLD'S LARGEST HD VIDEO BOARD AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
FORT WORTH, Texas (Feb. 14, 2014)
- Frigid temperatures, snow and ice in North Texas has not slowed
construction workers from continued progress on the world's largest HD
video board created by Panasonic at Texas Motor Speedway.
On
Friday, Dallas/Fort Worth media members were led by Texas Motor
Speedway President Eddie Gossage on a sneak preview of "Big Hoss TV,"
which is scheduled to be completed by March 1 and officially dedicated
during pre-race ceremonies for the Duck Commander 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race on Sunday, April 6.
Towering 12 stories high
over the backstretch is the completed steel framework that will serve
as the foundation for "Big Hoss TV." Workers have installed 28 of the 40
LED modules - each measuring 54.5 feet by 9.5 feet - that will be
placed in 10 rows of four that will serve as record HD display area that
measures 218 feet (width) by 94.6 feet (height).
Once completed, "Big
Hoss TV" will provide fans with 20,633.34 square feet of HD imagery and
will be 79 percent larger than the video board at AT&T Stadium
(11,520 sf), home of the Dallas Cowboys. It also will surpass current
record-holder Charlotte Motor Speedway (16,000 square feet), the
Speedway Motorsports, Inc. sister track of Texas Motor Speedway, for the
world's largest HD video board at a sporting venue.
"This is the largest fan
amenity we have ever undertaken in the history of Texas Motor Speedway
and it truly should be a game changer in the industry," Texas Motor
Speedway President Eddie Gossage said. "Panasonic has done a tremendous
job in keeping the project on schedule and have their crews working
around the clock seven days a week on this enormous undertaking. Given
the target completion date of March 1, we're working on a "Big Hoss TV"
sneak preview event with a dynamic entertainment element that will be
open to the public in mid-March that will be announced soon."
"Big
Hoss TV" also requires a state-of-the-art control room that is being
built and housed adjacent to the timing and scoring booth atop the
start/finish line on suite level. The control room houses five servers
and two switchers that control the video feed to "Big Hoss TV."
The
control room operator will have the luxury of choosing from 19
different cameras, 16 of which are operated by two production trucks.
Ultimately, the video is broken up into 16 different sections on the
video board. The equipment will be manned by a minimum of five
individuals which will include producer, director and technical
directors.
Construction on "Big
Hoss TV" began after November's AAA Texas 500 as workers began digging
16 anchor holes 42 feet deep and four feet in diameter for the massive
108-ton structure. "Big Hoss TV" is anchored with 42 feet of steel rebar
reinforced in the ground by 20 yards of concrete filled in each of the
holes. The strength of the foundation allows for "Big Hoss TV" to
sustain winds of 140 miles per hour.
Initial construction
plans also required workers to install 4,200 feet of 96-strand fiber
optic cable that runs from the location of "Big Hoss TV" on the
backstretch to the control room in the frontstretch suites.
Workers have moved to a
seven-day work week the past month to put the finishing touches on the
project by the end of the month. The final phase of the project includes
completion of the electrical infrastructure inside of the video board,
where workers will install electricity and fiber optic connections to
each of the 40 LED modules. Workers also will install the final wiring
in the control room before they begin to test the lower section of the
LED modules early next week.
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