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Alcorn McBride Goes Underground for Coal Mine Tour

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ORLANDO – Alcorn McBride meets the AV needs of The Portal 31 Tour, an underground coal mine museum in Lynch, KY.  Visitors shuttle through the mine on a narrow-gauge track.  Eight stops take them from the opening of the mine in 1917 to its closure in 1960. Alcorn McBride’s Digital Binloop HD multi-track video player went deep underground to enhance the tour.
More details from Alcorn McBride (http://www.alcorn.com):

Alcorn McBride Digital Binloop HD Meets AV Needs of Kentucky Underground Coal Mine Tour

Orlando – Alcorn McBride’s Digital Binloop HD multi-track video player went deep underground to service AV needs at the Portal 31 Mine Exhibition Tour in Lynch, Kentucky.  The two-year old attraction shows visitors what it’s like to venture into an actual working coal mine, teaches them the history of mining in the community and outlines advances in the industry through the decades.

“It’s a remarkable site: The Mine set records for coal production in a 10-hour shift and was the industry leader in safety,” says Bob Ernspiker, managing partner of Louisville-based Communications Electronic Design, Inc., which designed the exhibition.  “The mine was big in the war effort because the type of coal extracted was critical to steel production in World War II.”

The Portal 31 Tour presents the history of the Kentucky Coal Museum as it shuttles visitors through the mine on a narrow-gauge track.  Eight stops take them from the opening of the mine in 1917 to its closure in 1960.

“Stop eight has a seamless three-screen projection on the mine walls,” Ernspiker explains.  “The space is a big cavern with surround sound played in sync off the Digital Binloop HD; one Binloop channel is dedicated to each screen.  With the lights off, it’s dark and dramatic, and people get a really big kick out of it.  It’s very cool.”

He notes that equipment must be robust to keep running in the hostile environment of an underground coal mine.  “The Alcorn gear has performed flawlessly in an abrasive environment with constant moisture and huge humidity shifts.  We have problems keeping everything working despite equipment being housed in environmental enclosures.  The mine is extremely hard on equipment, but the Binloops have never broken down.”