Re: PA's - quick and dirty
Tom M said:
I know nothing about PA's. I'd love to be educated. Example situation:.....
How much wattage, what sort of speaker arrangements, etc? Just tell me anything and everything there is to know.
Thanks a bunch guys.
Whoa!
Hold your horses cat! There is lot to consider here.
First: What size venues are you playing?
Second: Are they going to get larger soon, or stay the same for some time?
Third: Since you obviously are new to this, it can't be complex.
Fourth: What kind of music are you playing?(contrary to popular belief it is somewhat important)
Fifth and Sixth: What kind of sound do you want and can you afford it?
As the old hotrodder maxim goes, speed costs; how fast do you want to go...
Not to mention your going to have to learn some basics about sound.
For instance: Most everyone can't really hear it below about 35-40Hz. At that range you just feel it. At about 120Hz or less(give or take) sound becomes hard to tell which direction its coming from(that's how a small subwoofer hidden under an end table can seem to fill a room). And at about 16-20kHz and above you just plain can't hear it or feel it. Low frequencies travel a long way and aren't picky about speaker placement, highs on the other hand have very defined sound field patterns, ergo the tweeters must be placed to saturate the audience as best they can. Feedback can be eliminated by using a sound analyzer to indicate the offending frequency(after flattening the room prior to the show with a noise generator and a calibrated mic) and then drop the corresponding eq slider just enough to squelch the noise. Since you are new though try something like the dbx Feedback Eliminator. It will do this for you, though I prefer the 'old school' method as it is rock solid, easy to learn, and detracts less from the sound(all of these new feedback reduction units use filters, sometimes many and can cut the sweet spot out of your sound{you get what you pay for here}). Alternatively you can get a new equalizer with this built-in.(prior caveat still holds)Mic placement, monitor placement, amp placement you can learn by trial and error. Try placing the bass player to the drummers left so he can easily hear the hi-hats. As to wattage.... No less than the speakers demand and no more than they need...that simple. I've seen over the years more amps and cabs ruined by under-powering the system than overpowering one. Match the ohms rating of the amp with the cab and power appropriately. Better the question how big a cab do you need to fill the room? Huge? Long throw cabinets(these are usually folded cab designs).
Small? These will typically be direct firing units. Oh, another note on eq's:
set them and forget them. Don't be constantly tinkering with them after you flatten a room. Eq's are the most easily abused/misunderstood part of a PA system. Sweeten at the board. Ah, the board. Simple recommendation: a used Peavey MKIII board. They are simple, quiet, easy to use/learn, come built into a flight case from the factory and are nearly indestructable. Don't EVER, repeat EVER let anyone drink or place a drink near the board. I nearly de-testicled a roadie in Memphis over spilling a beer in the master section of a 16 channel board in '88. Lucky we had another. Did I mention the MkIII's are cheap used? Awesome deals are to be had my man. Another thing, CS800 Peavey amps were the industry workhorse for years for a reason.
They sound nice, are super reliable, mostly idiot proof(learn the back patches and don't let anyone touch them), and are built like a M-1 Abrams tank! The effects rack is complicated topic. Tired now. If you like this and want more(like your head isn't busy enough now)reply to the thread and I'll launch into effects for PA.
Good Luck,
Tothaurun