[QUOTE=Ryan K Georgieff;n37840]Wow you guys gave me a lot to look at! that jbl is pretty awesome I could just run it through my mixer with no questions. but it is the same price as our projector and then I would need speakers! right now I am happy will adding some bed channels and vacuuming my EVs need to replace a cone or two. I grabbed a bargain of an amp from QSC and am going to separate the back Surrounds so we have 7.1 from there I am going to add some more speakers to the screen we have some already back there not doing anything some nice JBL wedges. they have been strict in the pass about having a live set of speakers and a cinema set of speakers which in my opinion is over kill on all fronts.[/QUOTE]
Two major points above that I bolded: (and they directly relate to each other)
First: Not sure what you mean by "JBL wedges" but, having done both cinema and live sound in my 43 years, they are different animals and using cinema speakers for live sound (and live sound for cinema speakers) WILL ALWAYS result in a very messy, often horrible, sounding system. Also, cinema stage (behind the screen speakers MUST BE IDENTICAL or you will end up with "Holes in the sound" and other nasty artifacts.) DO NOT MIX THEM, EVER. You will end up with worse sound. and:
Second point (the underlined/italic one) "They" are absolutely correct. It is not overkill, it is good and proper design practice.
Cinema sound uses somewhat fixed predetermined maximum SPLs (sound levels) and EQ specific to the way the film soundtracks are mastered. For a given room size, cinema requires half or less of the total audio power and SPL/dynamic range capability of live performance sound. And the EQ for live sound is constantly changing due to mic placements and levels, amplification needs for various instruments/sources, etc. Using the same speakers for cinema and live will end up with several compromises and problems, namely:
Bottom line: Cinema and live sound are radically different. Never try to combine them into a single set of processors, amps or speakers. The end results will never be right for either use.
Two major points above that I bolded: (and they directly relate to each other)
First: Not sure what you mean by "JBL wedges" but, having done both cinema and live sound in my 43 years, they are different animals and using cinema speakers for live sound (and live sound for cinema speakers) WILL ALWAYS result in a very messy, often horrible, sounding system. Also, cinema stage (behind the screen speakers MUST BE IDENTICAL or you will end up with "Holes in the sound" and other nasty artifacts.) DO NOT MIX THEM, EVER. You will end up with worse sound. and:
Second point (the underlined/italic one) "They" are absolutely correct. It is not overkill, it is good and proper design practice.
Cinema sound uses somewhat fixed predetermined maximum SPLs (sound levels) and EQ specific to the way the film soundtracks are mastered. For a given room size, cinema requires half or less of the total audio power and SPL/dynamic range capability of live performance sound. And the EQ for live sound is constantly changing due to mic placements and levels, amplification needs for various instruments/sources, etc. Using the same speakers for cinema and live will end up with several compromises and problems, namely:
- EQ will be radically different. Live EQ on cinema is usually very shrill and harsh sounding;
- SPL's that cinema speakers are designed for have a good chance of being far too inadequate to deal with live sound;
- How will you ensure that the calibrated cinema SPL's and EQ will be maintained and/or reset after a live show?
- Feedback, dropped mics, overdriven amplifiers will damage speakers. Combining both systems into one means one mistake and you are screwed for both uses. One live show can ruin your cinema system.
- Cinema speakers and sound mixes require specific speaker locations and placement and aiming, live sound requires totally different placements and aiming to permit higher SPLs while minimizing feedback risk.
- Audio routing and interconnection becomes a nightmare when you have to send both live and cinema to the same amps/speakers. You end up with hum and noise issues, as well as the risk of blowing speakers.
Bottom line: Cinema and live sound are radically different. Never try to combine them into a single set of processors, amps or speakers. The end results will never be right for either use.
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