Foyer
Speaker Systems
Joseph
De Buglio, JdB Sound Acoustics
Have
you ever been sitting near the back of a church and
heard and echo? Did it appear to come from the back
of the church? Would your first reaction be to think
that the echo was from the back wall? What would you
say if it was really coming from the Foyer Speaker
System?
Science
Lesson 102
If you have an interest in science and you like to
see God`s beautiful laws of physics at work, then
the church sound system provides many examples. In
nature, until recently, everyone thought that a bolt
of lightening traveled from the clouds down. The fact
is, the flash of light travels from the ground up
to the clouds. It has been the invention of high speed
photography that has captured the event to help scientist
to better understand lightening. Likewise, church
sound has many myths and events that appear to happen
one way but actually happen by other means.
In
terms of church sound, there are some constants that
can not be changed. Here are some of the basics.
-
Speed of sound is 1130 feet per second
- Sound travels faster in water - 4921 feet per second
- Sound travels faster as temperature and humidity
increases. Usually about 5% for the first 20 degrees.
- Sound travels at the speed of light when transmitted
through electrical wiring.
With
these facts at hand, we can now study the echo. An
echo is a reflection of sound energy from a surface
that is larger than ¼ the wave length and having
a signal path that is 140 feet or further. Therefore
a wall that is 70 feet away from where the sound starts
can produce an echo. At this distance, the echo may
return soon enough that it doesn`t interfere with
the program. As you get further away, the echo becomes
more apparent.
How
Does a Foyer Speaker Create Echo`s?
Most churches have foyer`s at the back of the church.
The foyer will have either doors or a direct path
into the worship area of the church. It is common
to have speakers on a volume control to allow people
to know when to enter the worship area and they often
work as overflow speakers when the sanctuary is packed.
When
standing near the foyer speakers, the foyer speakers
will get the sound first to the foyer. The sound from
the main sanctuary speaker system has to travel though
the air which is a slower medium for sound transmission.
As a result, people sitting near the back of the church
who can hear both the foyer speakers and the live
sound at the same time will hear an echo.
There
are several solutions.
Option 1. If your foyer has doors, keep them closed
at all times. Oh! You don`t like that idea?
Option 2. Turn the volume lower. Oh! You don`t like
that idea either???
Option 3. Add a digital delay to the distributed sound
system signal and set the delay for one millisecond
for each foot from the speaker cluster system to the
first foyer speaker and add about 7 to 15 millisecond
to give the foyer section the impression that the
sound is coming only from the sanctuary. (This is
usually referred to as the HASS Effect.)
Option
3 is the only real solution to the problem. If you
have already an under balcony system on a proper delay
setup, you should use another delay circuit just for
the foyer system. TOA and a few other manufacturers
offer delay systems that have one signal line in and
three delays outs.
Church
Sound System Delay Rules
As stated in another article, there are rules to church
sound that are based on mathematical equation. Although
many people know the math, they don`t always know
how it applies or it is applied wrong.
As
a sound system rule, it would be better to say that
a delay circuit is needed for every 20 feet of distributed
sound from the original sound source. Therefore, if
your church had a large foyer and you had four rows
of speakers that were 10 feet apart then there should
be two delays. This unfortunately drives up the cost
of church sound since a separate amplifier is needed
for each delay circuit.
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