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Old September 4th 06, 01:25 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
Keith G
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Posts: 7,388
Default Village Hall audio


wrote in message
oups.com...
Can anyone offer advice, please.

Our village hall (about 20m x 6m but very high roof) has what I thought
an adequate PA setup - a Shure hand-held radio microphone feeding a
decent PA amplifier (Carlsboro) feeding four Wharfedale Linton speakers
which are mounted (two on each wall), about 4m up and 5m apart - where
the eaves meet the walls, angled downwards.

The current setup is fine for playing music for kids to dance to. But
some of our older users have complained that speech sounds sound rather
"muffled". I can't sense a real problem myself, but have to admit that
the sound is not as clean as I have heard from good PA systems that use
a pair of speakers at say 2m above the ground. The question is whether
the problem is likely to be the speakers or their position.

A website on PA systems suggested that path differences of up to 50ms
(ie about 17m) are not a problem on intelligibility (our path
difference is 15ms at the very worst). Is that right?

I'd welcome suggestions as to whether we would do better to replace the
existing high-level speakers with PA speakers in the same position, or
to buy a pair of stand-mounted PA speakers for use when talks are being
given.

(As a multi-purpose hall, permanent mounting of speakers at lower level
doesn't look like a viable option).




I have seen a pic on the Net of a pair of Jerichos up in the rafters in a
village hall somewhere (above normal ceiling height in the open roofspace) -
a pair of those with the right drivers in 'em would cut through the earwax!!