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0 designing an evf/evh cluster (cont’) – Electro-Voice EVF/EVH EVF-1151S User Manual

Page 13

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Electro-Voice EVF/EVH User Manual

13

Figure 2:

Typical “reach” of a single loudspeaker

into a venue (D

I

) in order to maintain

the desired ±3 dB coverage is about

two times the distance to the closest

seats (D

S

)

3.0 Designing an EVF/EVH Cluster (cont’)

Adding a long-throw device will typically extend this reach to about three times the closest distance. See

Figure 3.

Figure 3:

Adding a long-throw device extends the reach to about three times the distance to the closest seat

For reaches beyond this, loudspeakers can be suspended over the audience, with their signal delayed

with respect to the front or source loudspeakers so that the sound image will appear to come from the

front of the room. The details of these design tips are beyond the scope of this manual and should be left

to experienced design personnel.

3.4 Coverage-Uniformity Target

A good uniformity target is ±3 dB throughout the audience area, particularly in the 2,000- and 4,000-Hz

octave bands, the bands most important for intelligibility. Such coverage should also be achieved in the

8,000-Hz band, important for “sparkle.” As a reference, a 1-dB level difference is nearly imperceptible, a

3-dB difference is noticeable but not a large change, a 6-dB change is clearly noticeable and a 10-dB

change is twice or half as loud. The ±3-dB uniformity target is related to these perceptual differences.