Just look at all these smiling faces -






And a walk around video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Baqxhi4rnLw
And a reverb test:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4C-tFVVqXU
Robby
Vertical tweeter arrays do so with pattern control that limits early reflections.nastyford77 wrote:Can you correct for reverb?
No, just the opposite. Outside, people tend to be farther away from the speakers - you can get away with narrower dispersion. Inside - they are spread out closer to the speakers - thus, wide dispersion is better.Ash wrote:Interesting point on dispersion.... Does this mean it's probably better to run a straight array indoors and use melded outdoors or large arenas? Asking because I will most likely be encountering indoors with a packed space of 300 and less.
"I see," said the blind man looking at nothing!Dave Non-Zero wrote:I should have restated i meant tight vertical dispersion. The wide horizontal dispersion of themelded is great indoors.
The tight vertical dispertion stops the sound bouncing off the ceiling and muddying up the sound. If you look at the pictures above, you see that the ceiling is the only reflective surface that is close to everyone in the room. Reflections off the Walls are too far away to be a problem here, and the floor is covered in people absorbing the high end, so keep the HF from bouncing off the roof and voilà, crisp sound.If you used a standard speaker setup with 40degrees vertical dispersion and up to 20 degrees of that is hitting the roof and bouncing back, smearing the sound.
is that not japanese? Not Chinese?Thanks, Dave! That is a great explanation. I am not worthy! [Where's the kow tow icon?]
Both cultures have what we write as k-o-w t-o-w - the most reverential bow whereby one kneels and touches the forehead on the ground.Dave Non-Zero wrote:is that not japanese? Not Chinese?Thanks, Dave! That is a great explanation. I am not worthy! [Where's the kow tow icon?]
Dave Non-Zero wrote:I should have restated i meant tight vertical dispersion. The wide horizontal dispersion of themelded is great indoors.
The tight vertical dispertion stops the sound bouncing off the ceiling and muddying up the sound. If you look at the pictures above, you see that the ceiling is the only reflective surface that is close to everyone in the room. Reflections off the Walls are too far away to be a problem here, and the floor is covered in people absorbing the high end, so keep the HF from bouncing off the roof and voilà, crisp sound.If you used a standard speaker setup with 40degrees vertical dispersion and up to 20 degrees of that is hitting the roof and bouncing back, smearing the sound.
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