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Sound for small gym
https://audioroundtable.com/forum/index.phpindex.php?t=rview&goto=88906&th=22149#msg_88906
I will be using upgraded 4pi's as speakers placed on table against wall, toed in, about 15' to 20' apart.
Are room modes any different for a larger venue, or is everything just scaled up from your living room?
Thanks
Paul
]]>ggnarley2018-09-29T18:20:03-00:00Re: Sound for small gym
https://audioroundtable.com/forum/index.phpindex.php?t=rview&goto=88919&th=22149#msg_88919
Room modes are less a problem in large rooms. The bigger problem in gymnasiums is the hard, reflective surfaces on all sides. It makes a midrange reflection problem, and a lot of echo. The directivity of the speakers will help, and that's sometimes as much as you can do. But you might also pad the walls, if possible. Gymnasiums often have padding for safety reasons, and it serves double-duty as sound damping material. It isn't much, but it helps.
]]>Wayne Parham2018-10-01T02:42:42-00:00Re: Sound for small gym
https://audioroundtable.com/forum/index.phpindex.php?t=rview&goto=88921&th=22149#msg_88921
Thanks for the info. The software I am using for playback has an equalizer so I can try decreasing the midrange a bit to see if it helps.
Paul]]>ggnarley2018-10-01T08:58:46-00:00Re: Sound for small gym
https://audioroundtable.com/forum/index.phpindex.php?t=rview&goto=89023&th=22149#msg_89023
Festival went really well. Ran with 35 watt Tube amp and sound was more than enough to fill the gym. During setup we turned up one of the current pop/dance tunes to see how it sounded, and I think the paint started peeling. Everybody in the gym stopped setting up and their eyes got real big. Still crystal clear but dance club loud. The soft dinner music at start was really sweet (Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, etc.)
The venue made a definite difference in sound. Bass was pronounced with mids and highs much softer than in living room. I was thinking going in that there would be a lot of midrange reflection due to block building. Didn't really have time to mess with moving speakers to different positions to see how that would change things. Just goes to show how much I have yet to learn about sound in general and it will be interesting trying different things out in the future.
Thanks again to Wayne for designing such a versatile speaker that can squeeze out every detail at home and also rip the roof off a gym, yet sound just as at ease in either case.
Thanks
Paul]]>ggnarley2018-10-21T15:08:39-00:00Re: Sound for small gym
https://audioroundtable.com/forum/index.phpindex.php?t=rview&goto=89025&th=22149#msg_89025
Thanks for the feedback and for the photos! Glad the festival went well!
People absorb a lot of sound, so a venue will act very differently when people are present. You probably would found a lot of midrange and echo with the room empty, but when people are there, they damp a lot of that. So for example, if the only people there are a couple dozen sports players, you hear that characteristic "gymnasium sound." But if the gymnasium is filled with a couple hundred people, they damp the room very well and it sounds much different.