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#41
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You know, the longer this thread goes on, the more I get nostalgic for
churches with no sound systems at all. I'm turning into an old fart, I guess, but I've stood in a hundred-year-old church with a bunch of old ladies singing hymns they've known for 75 years, no powered gear in the room other than light bulbs (and those not turned on when it's a sunny day), and even to this non-Christian it's an experience likely to bring me to tears. Okay, I see the usefulness of a Family Life Center, yes. Peace, Paul |
#42
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Panzzi wrote:
It just happened that we are talking about a Baptist church here. ![]() I can't let out the secret how I knew that, but awana tell you it might've had something to do with what you said the gym was going to be used for. - Logan |
#43
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![]() "anthony.gosnell" wrote in message ... "Panzzi" wrote Size of gym.: 100'(L) x 70'(W) x 30'(H) Wall: Tilted concrete wall construction on 3 sides, sheet metal on 4th side What exactly is "Tilted concrete"? Do you perhaps mean tiled concrete? Tilted concrete wall is where they pour the wall horizontally and "tilt" it up at the jobsite during assembly. Also called prefab, or "fabcrete." |
#44
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![]() "Pooh Bear" wrote in message ... Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don't worry about them, some people in this group have a hatred for Christianity. Hey, I'm no fan of certain religions including various flavours of Christianity. I won't let that stop me giving this guy some decent advice though. Don't be so bigoted pls. It just helps confirm the suspicion that religious ppl think they're the bees knees and we heathens are trash. How am I being bigoted? I'm glad that your hatred for Christianity isn't going to stop you from giving good advice, maybe it will stop you from getting s stab in on religion... oh wait...too late. |
#45
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![]() "Logan Shaw" wrote in message ... Panzzi wrote: It just happened that we are talking about a Baptist church here. ![]() I can't let out the secret how I knew that, but awana tell you it might've had something to do with what you said the gym was going to be used for. Family Life Center gave it away for me :-) |
#46
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My suggestion: don't even THINK of trying to do stage or musical work
in a room with three concrete walls and one sheet metal wall. If you CAN damp it down enough to be useful, it will be too dead for basketball games. What great advice, Scott! So tell them to build another building? A church with $7,000 for a sound system is gonna be able to afford this? And by the way, why does a basketball game need to be echoey? I'd be delighted to watch basketball, or play it, in a room with an RT60 of less than one minute. You know, it's funny, musical work is done all the time in a room with 3 concrete walls and one sheet metal wall. The nightclub that I was recording in Saturday is built that way. Does the room sound like Bass Hall? No. Is the band going to have a great sounding record? You bet. They sold a whole bunch of copies of the first live record and I have no doubt they will do it on this one. Audio is a compromise from the get-go. Where engineering comes in is when you are given a set of circumstances and formulate a plan to get the job done in the best manner possible. Whining that more money wasn't spent or that people don't respect the sound people is just plain unprofessional. |
#47
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#48
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"Romeo Rondeau" wrote
the job done in the best manner possible. Whining that more money wasn't spent or that people don't respect the sound people is just plain unprofessional. The professional aproach is to do it right the first time. In this case this means hiring an acoustician before you build the hall. -- Anthony Gosnell to reply remove nospam. |
#49
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He did mention what his budget was, and I believe it is inadequate to
do a workmanlike job. That's what I told him. The fact that it was a church helped to explain why the budget might have been inadequate. If this was someone asking how he, as a musician, should spend $7,000 on what he had hoped would be a $200,000 studio, would you suggest that I was against musicians because I told him that he needed to spend more, suggesting that it's common for musicians to believe that if they spend money on gear they'll have solved the problems? I don't think he was expecting the room to sound like Carnegie Hall. It was the manner in which you treated him that set me off. How was your post helpful? What was your intention for posting? I intended to suggest that while his budget might be sufficient for sound equipment, there would be more money needed for acoustical treatment. He may or may not have realized that. I suspect that maybe he had given it some thought but knew that the money wasn't there. I can accept that. How did you feel that your post was going to be interpreted? What did you expect for a reply? Think about it. Well, I certainly didn't expect to get this sort of reply from you. Stick to the facts - the fact is that I didn't believe he had enough money to do a good job, and that seems to be the concensus. Again, it was the way you replied that I thought was unprofessional. As for not expecting a reply like this from me, I didn't expect it from you either. I may have sounded more brash than I intended. I apologize. |
#50
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Paul Stamler wrote:
Romeo Rondeau wrote in message ... My suggestion: don't even THINK of trying to do stage or musical work in a room with three concrete walls and one sheet metal wall. If you CAN damp it down enough to be useful, it will be too dead for basketball games. What great advice, Scott! So tell them to build another building? A church with $7,000 for a sound system is gonna be able to afford this? And by the way, why does a basketball game need to be echoey? I'd be delighted to watch basketball, or play it, in a room with an RT60 of less than one minute. It's boring. In a room with a long RT60, you dribble that ball and you hear it bounce back from the room. A small crowd seems like a huge crowd cheering you on. I think Beranek actually wrote a paper about subjective responses to various acoustical environments that had a nice discussion of sports complexes. I will see if I can find it when I get back home. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#51
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![]() "anthony.gosnell" wrote in message ... "Romeo Rondeau" wrote the job done in the best manner possible. Whining that more money wasn't spent or that people don't respect the sound people is just plain unprofessional. The professional aproach is to do it right the first time. In this case this means hiring an acoustician before you build the hall. Of course, but it don't happen often. |
#52
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In article ,
Romeo Rondeau wrote: "anthony.gosnell" wrote in message ... "Panzzi" wrote Size of gym.: 100'(L) x 70'(W) x 30'(H) Wall: Tilted concrete wall construction on 3 sides, sheet metal on 4th side What exactly is "Tilted concrete"? Do you perhaps mean tiled concrete? Tilted concrete wall is where they pour the wall horizontally and "tilt" it up at the jobsite during assembly. Also called prefab, or "fabcrete." I am seeing brick walls done this way more and more often these days, but whatever happened to tip-up chimneys? Nobody around here has ever heard of them. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#53
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On Tue, 02 Mar 2004 05:59:45 GMT, "Paul Stamler"
wrote: And by the way, why does a basketball game need to be echoey? I'd be delighted to watch basketball, or play it, in a room with an RT60 of less than one minute. Peace, Paul Amen Brother! When Scott said that acoustics for a sporting event needed to be different from that of spoken word, I wondered WHY? The last time I went to a basket ball game I was in pain at the noise level in the room. I have done innumerable performances over 25 years in school gyms with a small Bose system and depending on the wall treatment and ceiling shape it varied the sound from passable to horrific. The client I was accompanying would invariably ask me to do something about the sound, to which I predictably reply "It's a gym" with an implied D-UH! I just redid the sound in my church (Unitarian). After the budget was submitted they cut it in half. I managed to get the most of right gear by a congregants generously offer to redo all the wiring and soldering rather than buying a new snake. The problem in this church is not acoustic it is a combination of amateur mic users and literally deaf (three with hearing aids) amateur soundmen. The new sound system will do nothing to improve either, I warned them and even offered a workshop on care and use of gear. Few attended. Non of the soundmen. I ended up having to train them individually on the new board repeatedly because they couldn't remember anything since it was all so different. One soundman was very upset that the meters had been torn out to make room for the new board. I explained the board had a built in led and that it was unnecessary 90% of the time to use them as we never exceed levels where it was a problem. But he said "since he can't hear he does sound by looking at them". I threw my hands in the air in supplication, and I'm a pagan! |
#54
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#56
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Panzzi wrote in message . 121...
Hi, My church is going to build a gym and I'm going to take care of its sound system. May I ask your suggestion? Size of gym.: 100'(L) x 70'(W) x 30'(H) Wall: Tilted concrete wall construction on 3 sides, sheet metal on 4th side for future expansion Frame: Steel frame building Stage: 48'(W) x 24'(D) Purpose: vocal, stage, musical Budget: US$7,000.00 Thanks in advance. Panzzi If it isn't too late, beg and plead the church council to suspend proceedings immediately until you can get someone on the design team that knows how to make a sanctuary sound good and give them the authority to override an architect that only knows how to make it look good. MacLuhan said that the medium is the message but in a church, mosque, or synagogue the message is the message. No matter how beautiful the room or how majestic the pipe organ sounds, if the words of the songs, prayers, and sermons aren't intelligible to everyone there you might as well use the property for a bowling alley. I'm coming up on the 1 year anniversary of being drafted to volunteer to run a (Baptist) church sound system in a sanctuary that was designed and built (while I wasn't around) with almost no thought given to sound until after it was nearly finished. As a result they have a very visually lovely echo chamber. The reverb time is something like 6 seconds. The standing wave situation is such that I can feed a single tone into the house speakers and if I walk up the center aisle quickly it sounds like a Leslie cabinet. It's not because we don't have decent equipment, it's because the acoustics are so horrid, and that's because there wasn't somebody involved from the very beginning that knew what kind of pitfalls to avoid. The better the acoustics of the room the less you'll need to spend on sound reinforcement. If you think I might be able to help get the message through to the powers that be email me at with your phone number. |
#57
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Too dead for basketball games?
Right. Pro basketball arenas are actually built with the thought in mind that if the crowd sound is really loud it will be more exciting to players & spectators. Teams refer to certain arenas as 'loud' or not. Is there some requirement of which I'm unaware that athletic events must always have bad sound? It has nothing to do with sound reinforcement. They want the audience response to be loud. I know that they almost always do, but I never thought it was intentional. That's because the people who want a loud arena (the basketball teams & owners) are not concerned with the fact that a venue has to take rock concert bookings to cover costs. Scott Fraser |
#58
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Romeo Rondeau wrote:
"Pooh Bear" wrote in message ... Romeo Rondeau wrote: Don't worry about them, some people in this group have a hatred for Christianity. Hey, I'm no fan of certain religions including various flavours of Christianity. I won't let that stop me giving this guy some decent advice though. Don't be so bigoted pls. It just helps confirm the suspicion that religious ppl think they're the bees knees and we heathens are trash. How am I being bigoted? I'm glad that your hatred for Christianity Where did I say I had hatred for Christianity ? I don't. I don't happen to practice conventional Christianity but I admire its central tenets. isn't going to stop you from giving good advice, Exactly - it won't. I'm not small-minded, unlike ( sadly ) so many self-appointed so-called 'Christians'. maybe it will stop you from getting s stab in on religion... oh wait...too late. Mmmmmm They say Satan was / is ? a fallen angel. Maybe he was ****ed off with humbuggery ? Graham |
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