T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1780.1 | lots of options, none of them too clean | NRPUR::DEATON | In Tents | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:44 | 36 |
| Often boards have both HiZ and LoZ outs - have you checked for that?
If all you have is LoZ outs from your board, you can either buy the HiZ to LoZ
transformers (they're about $12 - you'll need 4) or you might want to just look
for another EQ. Using transformer's, I'm told, deteriorates the sound. I
haven't noticed a problem when I use them, but that's what I'm told. You could
probably get away with not using a transformer on the out of your EQ, now that
I think about it, because you're sending a line level signal and it is not as
susceptible to noise (which is the reason for balanced 3-conductor cables). The
main thing you'll need to be concerned with is making sure the cables on the
other end of the snake get hooked up correctly to the amp.
Here's how it would look:
------+ +----+
Mixer | ---> Xformer ---> | EQ | --->1/4" to 3-prong cable (1 line dead) --->
------+ +----+
+-------+ +-----+
---> | snake | ---> 3-prong to 1/4" cable ---> | amp |
+-------+ +-----+
I DON'T believe its a good idea to jury-rig the LoZ wiring to go into
a HiZ input. You should use some kind of transformer.
Changing the sends on your snake would accomplish more or less the same
result - you'd save having to have special cables.
As far as the use of the BBE, where you use it depends on what you want
out of it. I'd say a devise like that should be run in a channel loop as
opposed to an effects loop, but that means you can only use it on one
instr/voice. If you wanted it on the whole mix, the way you had it is fine
(although I'm not sure if EQ should come before BBE or the other way around).
BTW, COMMUSIC has a number of discussions on cables, PA's etc. Check
those out as well.
Dan
|
1780.2 | NO CAN DO!!! | HAMER::KRON | Lost in a strange land | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:47 | 11 |
| -sorry guy but you can't really just make an adapter that easily
the xlr's are balanced and a much lower impedance then the 1/4"plug
type circuit.....try radio shat they sell little converters i think..
or your favorite music dealer should have 'em.They havea little
teenie weenie transformer to convert the signal....they work well
and only cost 5-10$
play nice,
-Bill
|
1780.3 | | NRPUR::DEATON | In Tents | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:54 | 9 |
| RE < Note 1780.2 by HAMER::KRON "Lost in a strange land" >
No, you misunderstood what I said... Use a transformer from the mixer
to the EQ, but there's no real need to change the EQ'd signal back to a balanced
signal for the snake - a cable that only uses the two conductors of the XLR
should do just fine.
Dan
|
1780.4 | mono vs stereo 1/4" jacks | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:55 | 21 |
| What kind of eq do you own ? I have a Rane ME15 which has 1/4"
jacks, but the jacks are stereo (rts) type jacks, and are actually
balanced outputs. You wire up a cable with stereo (rts) jacks
on one end, and xlr on the other. RTS stands for ring,tip,sleeve.
The manual I got with my Rane eq includes an entire page of
possible hookup configurations.
If your eq has 1/4" mono jacks with only a tip and sleeve connection,
you will need to leave one of the pins on the xlr jack floating, as
apposed to shorting them together.
Another possibility is to place the eq right near the power amps.
run the output of your pa down the balanced send of your snake, and
use a xlr-1/4" transformer to interface the eq.
If you can provide more information (ie whether your eq has mono
or stereo (rts) jacks for starters), I might be able to tell you
how to hook it up.
Mark
|
1780.5 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Thu Apr 12 1990 15:37 | 26 |
| RE: .2
"Play nice,"
And just what the hell is that supposed to mean ! Agagagaga. Just kidding.
;)
Thanks folks.
The kind of EQ I have is an Ibanez GE1502 (Graphic EQ 15 band, two channel
I guess). I didn't get a manual with it, so I don't know the connections...
Maybe I can pull it apart and figure it out. The transformer idea was
considered, but they always seemed a little "mickey mouse" for a PA...Perhaps
I'm just ASSuming they don't work well. I was thinking that those
cords that go from XLR to 1/4" might work...But I don't have any (again, I
always thought they were a little Mickey Mouse.
The other possibility would be to go from the MAIN out (XLR) to the BBE (which
has a XLR input and output) and out of the BBE 1/4" output thru the EQ to the
power amps.
I hate PA's and stuff. I'm a guitar player (or I pretend to be) I hate worrying
about PA crap...But ! We just got ourselves a fulltime sound man, so that'll be
nice.
jc
|
1780.6 | misconceptions | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Tue Apr 17 1990 14:11 | 20 |
|
>>I hate pa's and stuff<<
I hate working with equipment I don't understand. I hate walking
around with misconceptions thinking I know what I am talking
about. Peavey put out an excellant explanation of PA system
basics, including balanced vs unbalanced systems, low vs high
impedance, how transformer balancing works, floating grounds,
etc. I have seen this writeup in their Professional sound systems
catalougue.
Niel Orsi (a well known soundman and fellow DECCIE) has provided
a great deal of information and has cleared up many misconceptions
(at least in my mind) about PA systems. Drop him a line, and he can
probably advise you better than anyone I can think of.
Mark Jacques
|
1780.7 | is that Neil (LEDS::) Orsi? | SMURF::BENNETT | Towers Open Fire! | Tue Apr 17 1990 14:29 | 0 |
1780.8 | yep | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Wed Apr 18 1990 10:09 | 4 |
| Yep, that's the guy. Niel provided the sound for all of the DECJAMS
that we had in Worcester at "Uptown".
Mark
|
1780.9 | | LEDS::ORSI | Listen up now ya little booger machines | Thu Apr 19 1990 09:47 | 92 |
|
Hi Mark
OK Coop, here goes,
>There are three wires in a XLR, which ones do I short together on the
>1/4" jack when I go to solder.
>Trouble is, the EQ has 1/4" input and output jacks...The board and
>snake have XLR three-prongers. Sould I convert the snakes monitor
>and main sends to be 1/4", so I can run my EQ ?
You should have six cables, each with an XLR on one end, and a
1/4" phone plug on the other end. Two for mixer (main and monitor)
to EQ, two for EQ (or BBE) to snake, and two for snake box to amps.
Also, you won't have to change all the connectors on the snake.
If you're using regular single conductor guitar cable, then the
connections should be;
Pin #1 of the XLR to shield (gnd)
Pin #2 (-) to the shield also.
Ideally, you should use two conductor (microphone) cable
with the second conductor on pin #2 of the XLR, and the other
end soldered to the shield at the phone plug. This would, at
least, give you interference immunity for the length of the
cable, which is the major reason for using balanced lines.
Pin #3 (+) soldered to wire that connects to the
tip of the 1/4" phone plug.
This works on both transformer balanced AND electronically (op-amps)
balanced outputs, and this must be done for your system to work
correctly. If you do not short pin #2 to gnd, gain is cut in half,
which may account for clipping the main output of the mixer, in
the attempt to get enough out of the system.
BTW, if you have a unit that has 1/4" phone TRS balanced inputs
and outputs, you can use regular guitar cords to patch things
together. Pin #2 (ring connection) gets grounded automatically
when you plug in.
Once you get all this done, check all connections with an ohmmeter
and check for shorts against the other connections.
>Another question. I have a BBE single channel Sonic Maximizer.
>Should I run this in mine with the EQ, or should I run it in one of the FX
>loops with either the DDL or DDR ??
About the Sonic Minimizer, use it to hold the door open
when you're unloading your gear, or last in the main
out line. :^) These work best when recording, if at all.
>What I've been doing (and I get a lot of clipping this way) is coming
>out of the boards main send, thru the EQ, thru the BBE and into the snake to
>the power amps...Of course, this is with another snake...one with 1/4" sends.
Make sure that the MIXER-->RACK-->SNAKE-->AMPS connections are
right. If the problem still exists, then you should check these
things;
A) Channel inputs gains may be set too low. Gotta make'em hot
without clipping the channel. And flatten all channel EQ's.
B) Bypass the BBE during the sound check, until you can see things
are OK.
C) Check the gain pot on the EQ. Generally, it should be at unity,
i.e., 0dBV, which is at 12 o'clock on a rotary pot, or in the
middle for a slide pot. If you need to, adjust it to something above
unity, and bring the mains on the mixer down to a reasonable level.
You definitely don't wanna be clipping the board. But be careful,
EQ's generally get noisy above unity.
D) Power amp gain pots may be turned down to low. Start with gain
pots all the way up ON THE AMP driving the bass bins, then balance
the mids and highs to the low end. You haven't said whether you are
using an outboard crossover or the Peavey cans, but either way,
it's a good place to start.
E) Speaker connections should be phased properly. If not, you'll
have them trying to cancel each other out and all the gain in
the world ain't gonna help you.
F) Your system may not be able to produce the SPL you need to do
the job. You may be pushing it beyond its limits.
I hope this helps
Neal
|
1780.10 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Thu Apr 19 1990 15:47 | 15 |
| Whoa...
Gotcha.
Thanks Neal !
BTW - I'm using SP2A's for mains, so I guess you can say I'm crossing
using the Peavy Cans... (ergo, whatevers inside the SP2's!).
When we play the bigger places we use a CS1000 for some VOT A7 bass bins,
CV MID horns and AltecLansing horns. I have a Rane 3way xover for that
application.
Thanks for all the advise though, I'll go play.
jc
|
1780.11 | crossing over | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Mon Apr 23 1990 11:05 | 26 |
| It sounds like the SP2A's have a passive x-over built into them, and
you are sending them a full range signal. Passive x-overs are okay,
but you always lose some power in the rc networks these circuits
use to split the signal.
Active xovers are prefered because you split the line level signal
before the power amp. These maintain unity gain and nothing is lost
in an RC circuit.
Peavey cans, are small plug ins that connect to the back of Peavey
power amps (ie. CS400's, CS800's, CS1200s). These cans split the
line level signal into high and low before they see the amplifier
like any active x-over would. The highs come out one power amp channel,
and the lows come out the other. The main differance between using
cans and a full function active x-over, is the cans are pre-set for
a certain x-over freq, and are designed for unity gain. Active x-overs
allow you the flexibility of selecting the x-over freq, and you can
get some gain out of them if you need to.
If you have an active x-over network, you could rewire the SP2A's
so that you can bi-amp them for maximum efficiency. Some speakers
have multiple inputs so you can bi-pass the passive x-over or use
it.
Mark
|
1780.12 | | LEDS::ORSI | Listen up now ya little booger machines | Mon Apr 23 1990 17:08 | 29 |
|
Just a couple more things about the SP-2(A)'s;
The built-in passive crossover has a pad (resistor network
attenuator) circuit to match horn/spkr output, but also has
a passive EQ filter to correct anomalies which occur in speaker
systems like these, in order to make them sound more "natural".
When bi-amping the SP-2, these are bypassed. To me, SP-2(A)'s
sound better actively crossed at 100-150Hz to a sub like the
1-18" or FH-1. Above that, the SP-2's runs full range.
Mark is right about power loss through passive crossovers, but at
1.2K, it's not much if you don't push them real hard. Besides, it's
not the -real- problem. A symptom , yes. If you've got the whole
band, including drums and bass, going through a pair of SP-2A's,
the 15" will suck up most of the power and the horn output drops.
This problem is effectively eliminated when the SP-2(A)'s are
crossed over down low to a sub, by letting the 15" in the SP-2A
off the (LF) hook, and allowing to become much more efficient for
lo-mids/mids/highs.
I was at a Peavey seminar last year when Marty McCann demoed the
SP-2A's. Bandwidth can be extended to 40Hz by blocking the longer
of the two ports on the front baffle. BUT, he recommended it for
DJ's and other moderate level use, not high level sound
reinforcement. (Hey Coop, I have a feeling that I'm going to
regret telling you that).
Neal
|
1780.13 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Mon Apr 23 1990 17:44 | 6 |
| I be likin' it loud ! (of course, you knew that ;)
Thanks dudes ! Playing at a medium sized club this weekend, and we'll try
some other tricks !
jc
|
1780.14 | low-end hi-end deal! | MAIL::EATOND | | Wed Jan 02 1991 10:49 | 28 |
| I didn't know where else top put this...
If anyone is looking for a cheap but nice sounding high end to their PA
system, I have found a real deal. Parts Express is now selling a
constant directivity horn for the alltime low price of ~$12, and they
also have a new tweeter that screws into it (the horn uses EV's 1 3/8
standard) for only $10! I bought these last month and finally had a
chance to hook them up over my theile cabs with EVM12L's. For the
price, they sound great!
The tweeter is a pieze driver, so no x-over is necessary - just run
them in parallel. The horn is made of very strong plastic and constant
directivity is the way to go (all the companies have been switching
over from radial designs to constant directivity in the last few years.
If you have ever bought horns and the drivers to go into them, you
know that a single cd horn and even a cheap driver can run you in the
neighborhood of $100 at least! This is a deal that can satisfy most
audiences and keep you from having to go broke buying or replacing
drivers.
Part Express can be reached by calling 1-800-338-0531. Ask them to
send you a catalog - they have lots of other good deals - not only
speakers and speaker cabinet accessories, but other electronics as
well.
Dan
|
1780.15 | effects & mixers | HAVASU::HEISER | briefing for the ascent | Mon Sep 30 1991 16:19 | 9 |
| No matter how dumb, I have to ask something about using effects with
mixers in a live situation.
I know you can control the saturation level of effects in each channel,
but how can you simultaneously have different effects (presets) on
different channels? do you have to buy a processor for each channel?
Thanks,
Mike
|
1780.16 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Life's short ... note smart ! | Mon Sep 30 1991 16:22 | 5 |
| Yup, different processors for each channel. You can `cheat' a little
if your board has 2 effects loops, but you're still back to the same
problem.
Scary
|
1780.17 | bummer | HAVASU::HEISER | briefing for the ascent | Mon Sep 30 1991 16:33 | 1 |
| I think we only have 1 loop.
|
1780.18 | New feature? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Don't ask me what I think of you... | Mon Sep 30 1991 19:09 | 6 |
| I think Brian was saying that his new Roland efx unit would allow
different effects in the stereo channels. You might check into
something like that. If it does, it's the only one I've heard of that
does that.
Greg
|
1780.19 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:09 | 5 |
| Anyone out there familiar with the Peavey SP2 cabs? What features do
they have? What size and configuration of drivers? How much power
will they handle?
Greg
|
1780.20 | SP2 | TECRUS::ROST | The creator has a master plan | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:27 | 13 |
| The SP2 is a two-way cab with a 15" Black Widow driver and a
compression driver feeding a large horn. There are a few versions, the
original, the SP2a, the SP2Ti, etc. which represent driver
improvements. I *think* the rating is 200 watts RMS. You can run full
range with internal crossover or biamp them. For real oomph, Peavey
used to recommend stacking these on top of a 1-18" sub.
Overall, an OK cab but a bit on the bulky side. They can be mounted on
stands, but just barely. Personally, I like the sound of the competing
EV cabs (SH-1502?) better but the Peaveys are rugged and usually
available ultra-cheap used.
Brian
|
1780.21 | TIIIIIMMMMBBBBEEEERRR! | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Indecision; the key to flexibility | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:31 | 3 |
| >> They can be mounted on stands, but just barely....
if you have the stands extended above about 5', DON'T bump into them!
|
1780.22 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:49 | 7 |
| > but the Peaveys are rugged and usually available ultra-cheap used.
Hense my interest...
Thanks!!!
Greg
|
1780.23 | | LEDS::ORSI | Kinfolk said..move away from there | Wed Jun 01 1994 13:56 | 13 |
|
The SP-2Ti is a two-way vented 8 ohm enclosure. It has a 15" Black Widow
spkr, a 22T 1" throat driver w/Titanium diaphragm. It's rated 300W cont-
inuous, 600W program, 60Hz-17KHz, 101.5dB, measures 23.75"W x 31.875"H x
17.125"D, weighs 93 lbs, has a built in stand adaptor, built-in 2-way
passive crossover, patch capability for bi-amping.
I've owned the SP-3. My choice now would be the SP-5Ti. It's 23 lbs
lighter, cheaper, measures 19.5"W x 26.5"H x 13.875"D, with just about
the same specs as it's big brothers.
Neal
|
1780.24 | | ABACUS::PAGE | | Thu Jun 02 1994 15:42 | 7 |
|
Don't know much about Peavey SP2's, but I've got a pair of
SP-1's that I've had for years. They still work! They're huge,
though... takes at least 2 strong guys to carry them (that equals
out to about 4 skinny guitar players, I think).
|
1780.25 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Jun 02 1994 16:33 | 4 |
| Thanks for the info, gents, but I messed around and missed the "deal".
No problem, I'll keep it in mind for the future.
Greg
|
1780.26 | SP2s + 18" subwoofers / what'll they cover? | SSDEVO::LAWYER | | Fri Jun 03 1994 11:23 | 14 |
| RE: SP2s
Anybody here in notesland have guestimates on the following:
How many people ( or what size room, etc. ) will 2 SP2s driven by
a Peavey '850' and a pair of 18" subwoofers driven by a Peavey '1300'
cover? The range I've heard so far is low-150 people, high-500 people.
Also heard the opinion that this setup is inadequate for outdoor
applications.
Any opinions? Thanks.
Kent
|
1780.27 | | KDX200::COOPER | Revolution calling! | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:02 | 2 |
| SP2's are quite notorious for snuffing their horn-drivers... I've seen
several go away...
|