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Appendix b — system design guide, Selecting and positioning ceiling loudspeakers, Ceiling systems: size vs. coverage – Electro-Voice EVID User Manual

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Selecting and Positioning
Ceiling Loudspeakers

Several key criteria determine the type and

quantity of ceiling speakers to employ in a job.

Specific EVID™ Ceiling Series models accom-

modate each job, depending on how these cri-

teria are specified.

• Room size

• Coverage density desired

• Coverage angle specification of the speaker

• Ceiling height

• Audio program material being played

The information below, and the free design

program downloadable from

www.electrovoice.com (under downloads/speak-

ers), will help you optimize your EVID design.

In the traditional approach to overhead-

distributed systems, loudspeakers are placed in a

grid whose dimensions are dictated by the room

height and the directivity of the speaker ele-

ments.Two basic placement patterns prevail:

square spacing and hexagonal (or crisscross)

spacing. See Figure 22.

In addition to the spacing pattern, the

designer must choose between three coverage

density types, designated respectively as edge-

to-edge, minimum overlap and center-to-center.

The greater the overlap, the more uniform the

coverage.The illustration below shows these

various layout patterns.

Ceiling Systems: Size vs.
Coverage

In the past, system designers usually specified 8-

inch cone loudspeakers for distributed overhead

systems, at least in part because they represented

the traditional choice. EVID systems, however,

allow for far more flexible options.

In many cases, you can achieve excellent

results — at a significant savings — by using 4-

inch transducers.This is especially true in jobs

that do not require extended low-end response or

high SPL levels. 4-inch transducers, such as those

used in the C4.2, offer wider dispersion to allow

for fewer speakers to be employed in the job. For

example, due to its smaller cone diameter, the

C4.2 exhibits significantly wider dispersion (130

degrees) than the C8.2 (110 degrees) at the -6 dB

points.

The effect of this characteristic on an overhead

system is indicated in Figure 23. In replacement

applications where existing speaker positions are

used, the C4.2 (shown in angle A) offers greater

overlap and, thus, more uniform coverage than an

older conventional 8-inch unit (shown in angle

B).When specifying a new system, you can take

advantage of the C4.2’s wider dispersion to

decrease the number of speakers required to

cover a given area.This will result in even greater

savings.

Of course, the C4.2 is somewhat less sensitive

than the 8-inch C8.2.The difference is

–5 dB.The C4.2 will also have slightly reduced

low-frequency capabilities below 65 Hz.

However, neither of these factors is a significant

problem in many distributed systems.The C4.2 is

conservatively rated to handle 80 watts of con-

tinuous power equal to or greater than most

other brands of 8-inch units, so its continuous

SPL output will be more than adequate.

Moreover, its low-frequency output can easily be

augmented with the addition of the C10.1 sub-

woofer. For these reasons, the C4.2 represents a

great way for you to provide good audio cover-

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EVID™ Ceiling Series Installation and Operation Manual

Appendix B — System Design Guide

Grid

Edge-to-edge Minimum

overlap

Center-to-

center

H

e

x

a

g

o

n

a

l

S

q

u

a

re

Figure 22: Coverage patterns

Ceiling

A

B

A

B

Figure 23: Size vs. coverage