IGOE PA Hire

Archive for May, 2007

Igoe Sound & Light : Fat Salad,

Sunday, May 20th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire, Bristol, provides sound and lighting for live music from Fat Salad at an event for mountain rescue volunteers held at the Royal Marriott hotel on Park Street in Bristol.

Fat Salad

Fat Salad are an established Bristol based four piece funk/ska/punk outfit who blend phat bass, animalistic drums, obese guitar and crazy vocals into a high energy mash up. Over the years “the Salad” have rocked hundreds of venues throuoght Bristol, the UK & Europe

http://www.myspace.com/fatsaladband

Diary 19/05/07

We showed up at (stinky) goods entrance of the spectacular Bristol Royal Mariott and lugged all the kit up to there largest function room - the “King Suite”.

Knowing just how phat, fat salad’s sound is, we made sure to bring plenty of sub action for this gig. The PA was 4.3 k rms in total through two double 15″ full range cabs and two 18″ subs.

Fat Salad

We ensured plenty of on stage monitoring with galaxy hot spots and two of our brand new custom 12″ 600 watt ! full range cabs. (the blue ones in the pic). No complaints there.

For lighting we had two power glide stands with bars of 6, 300 watt lamps and gels. Lots of timely chases and blackout / full on work certainly added to the overall spectacle.

“The Salad” certainly didn’t disappoint with two cracking sets including there own classics like “Happy as Larry” and “Push It” as well as several covers including a surprising rendition of the “Countdown” theme !

Although very minimal, the audience was right behind them.

Dan and I worked hard to deliver the goods and should be engineering the band again soon - hopefully with a wall to wall ‘avin it crowd.

Understanding power ratings and impedance (Ohms) in pa / sound systems.

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

This article aims to provide the complete beginner with a basic understanding of loudspeakers & amplification equipment. In addition to power ratings and how ohms (impedance) affect this, the reader will attain a basic grasp of amp bridging and how and why to allow “head room”. The main objective is to provide the layman with knowledge of how to match up speakers with amps in any pa / sound equipment set up.

A loudspeaker is a fairly simple piece of equipment. It’s a wooden box with a piece of hardware known as a “driver” screwed into it. The driver is made up of two ring magnets one within another, attached to a cone (the familiar round black thing with a bump in the middle). When power is supplied to the outer ring the inner magnet moves back and forth which in turn moves the cone creating sound waves that humans can hear. The faster the cone moves back and forth the higher pitched the sound that is heard.

All loudspeaker drivers have power ratings which are given in watts. This can be confusing because the wattage can be quoted in three different ways:

RMS continuous power, program power and peak power.

Peak power is the maximum a loudspeaker can handle for a very short time (feedback spikes etc.)

Program power is a relatively safe range but you wouldn’t want to run into this for too long.

RMS continuous or AES is the actual power the speaker driver can supposedly handle continuously without overheating.

Program Power is double the RMS and Peak is double the program power.

Whenever you are sizing up a pa speaker always look for the RMS or AES continuous power rating.

A high power pa speaker might be rated like this:

450 Watts RMS, 900 Watts Program, 1800 Watts Peak.

Anyone who knows their stuff and isn’t trying to con you will always quote the RMS or AES rating.

Most pa speakers are rated at either 4 or 8 ohms.

Amplifiers will usually handle loads of 4 ohms or more. Some good quality amps can handle loads of 2 ohms.

Amp manufacturers provide power ratings for their products at 4, 8 and sometimes 2 ohms. The amount of power an amp will supply depends on the speakers “ohms” that you have hooked up to it.

A 4 ohm speaker would get (very approximately) twice the power that an 8 ohm speaker would get from the same amp.

Loudspeakers have an input on the back and an output so that you can link speakers together (sometimes called daisy chaining). If you “daisy chain” two speakers together and connect them up to an amp you effectively halve the load (ohms). From the amps point of view, two 8 ohm speakers linked together is the same load as one 4 ohm speaker.

Don’t worry if you’re already confused.

Let’s look at an example:

The Peavey PV 2600 amp is fairly common. It has two channels A & B. Each channel is rated at 900 watts @ 4 ohms and 550 watts @ 8 ohms.

In this example we are just using channel A.

If we hook up a 4 ohm speaker to channel A on the PV 2600 it would get 900 watts. If we plug in an 8 ohm speaker it would get 550 watts.

Now, if we “daisy chain” two 8ohm speakers together then the amps would share the 900 watts between the two speakers so they would kick out 450 watts each.

Although the power output is the same - this arrangement would actually sound “louder” than one 900 watt 4ohm speaker.

Only a top quality professional 18” Sub driver rated at 4 ohms could comfortably handle 900 watts RMS.

If we were to daisy chain four of the 8 ohm speakers onto channel A of the Peavey PV 2600 then this would be equivalent to a load of 2 ohms. The amp cannot handle this and would very quickly overheat and break down. 

Some stage monitors like the “galaxy hot spot” are rated at 16 ohms. This means that you could “daisy chain” four of them together and connect them to channel A on the PV 2600 because this would be equivalent to a 4 ohm load on the amp. 900 watts divided amongst four speakers equals 225 watts per speaker - this is just about right for galaxy hot spots which are rated at 200 watts RMS.

Touring companies or large scale pa hire companies will choose very high power, good quality amps that can handle loads down to 2 ohms.

As another example the Peavey CS4000 amp can handle a load of 2 ohms. This particular model supplies 2000 watts @ 2 ohms 1350 watts @ 4 ohms and 800 watts @ 8 ohms. This means that if you “daisy chain” four 8 ohm speakers onto a CS4000 you get 2000 watts shared amongst four speakers, 500 watts each.

It’s not usually a good idea to run amps at 2ohms as they get very hot. It’s a bit like buying a new car and thrashing it around town. It won’t last very long. It’s the same with amps - running them cool at 8 ohms is the best way to protect them and make sure they last.

Sub woofers always need the most power and you can buy drivers like the Eminence Kilomax series or the PD 2150 that will happily handle 1000 watts RMS all day long.

To drive these you either need a bad ass amplifier which will cost you big bucks or you can do what is known as bridging. This is where you take an amp like the Peavey PV1500 which is rated at 500 watts @ 4 ohms and 300 watts @ 8 ohms and combine channels A + B. This is done by pushing a switch on the back of the unit. You then, effectively, have four times as much power output. (It’s actually double but you have also halved the impedance (ohms).)

So you only have one channel (A), but it is chucking out 1000 watts into an 8 ohm speaker (amp thinks it’s 4 ohms) and 1500 watts into 4 ohm speaker (amp think it’s 2 ohms). You could plug in one 1000 watt 8 ohm speaker and drive it perfectly or you could “daisy chain” two 750 watt 8 ohm speakers and drive both of them safely. 

Don’t ever hook up a 4 ohm speaker onto a bridged amp. I have never seen a 4 ohm speaker that handles 1500 watts! Don’t ever “daisy chain” two 4 ohm speakers onto a bridged amp as this would be equivalent a load of 1 ohm and the amp would probably melt through the floor!

The 15″ / 12″ or 10″ main driver in your speaker can vibrate back and forth producing most sounds from very low frequencies 35 Hz up to about 2000 Hz or 2 kHz. Hz is simply a measure of how fast the cone is moving back and forth. Humans can hear from about 40 Hz up to about 18 kHz (18,000 Hz).

Full range speakers always have a compression driver or “tweeter” to fill in the gap from 2 kHz - 18 kHz. These are like mini versions of the main driver usually 1″ in diameter. These can produce all the higher pitched sounds you need so that when combined with the bass driver the speaker cabinet is truly “full range”.

Full range speakers provide all the detail in sound reproduction so it’s best that they are kept “comfortable”. They need to be running cool but with a bit more power than they need. This is called “head room”. It’s like cruising in a Ferrari at 70 mph, the engine is “purring” with plenty of power left.  You would use an amp that is approximately 20 % more powerful than the RMS rating on the speaker but it’s very important NOT to crank the mixer to the max. 

Don’t go “daisy chaining” all your full range cabs so that the amp runs at 2 ohms. For the best sound quality you need to run the sound system cool. So you want the amps at 8 ohms (usually one speaker on each channel), with 20 % more amp power than the RMS rating on the loudspeakers.

The subs provide all the “thud” in a big sound system and need lots of power to move the big 18″ or 15″ drivers. It’s ok to run these at 2 ohms in fact you may have to get enough power out of your amps.

Hopefully you now have a basic appreciation of how sound amplification works and you understand which speakers go with which amps. You also know how to safely bridge your amplifier and you understand about allowing head room in a full range system.

Ben Igoe (16/05/07)

CLIC24 - PA & Lighting Hire

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides outdoor sound reinforcement, engineering and lighting for live musical entertainment at the CLIC24 - supporting CLIC Sargent, 24 hour charity mountain bike endurance event.

CLIC24 - PA Hire

http://www.clic24.org.uk/

Diary 12/05/07

We arrived at the site near Blagdon reservoir in a hideous downpour! The ground was muddier than glasto 05 and we had to park the van (temporarily) 50 yards from the marquee behind a wall and lug the gear over. It doesn’t get any tougher than this! – However, the two bands that were due to play gave us lots of help shifting our gear during a brief dry spell.

The actual site of the marquee (6 x 2 mouldy old Scout hand me down) was perched on the edge of a deep bowl in the ground not unlike a small meteor crater. Using a 30 meter multi-core we managed to run cables around the edge to the far ridge where we erected a gazebo for the sound / lighting desk.

Somehow we managed to pull this one off. It had to be minimal because everything had to run off one 13 Amp socket 100 meters away and… yes, it did blow half way through! We ran a 1.6 k sound system for front of house and 600 watts in monitors.

We put up two power glide stands inside the marquee and mounted 2 bars of 6, 300 watt par cans (12 altogether) with gels and hooked them up to DMX dimmers.

The rain came down heavy again during sound check and I thought we might have serious problems. The gazebo leaked so we gaffer’d bin bags to the walls then amazingly the rain stopped for the rest of the evening.

We lost power for about 30 mins but managed to locate the specific fuse with some difficulty on a plug on one of the extension reels, bin bagged up, halfway across the field.

Surprisingly the gigs went great and the sound system was excellent – although 5 times more power would have been nice! The lighting rig looked awesome in the dark.

Wedding Sound & Lighting Hire, Elmgrove Centre

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides a complete disco PA system hire with a full disco lighting rig for a wedding party held at the Elmgrove centre, Redland Bristol.

Diary 12/05/07

We rigged up the PA system during the afternoon using 2 double 15” cabs with Fane drivers - we supplied 2.7 K of continuous power with a CS 4000 Amp.

For disco lights we set up a 3 meter truss and hung 2 VRX Gladiators, 2 NJD DMX 250 and a NJD Datamoon in the middle.

When we arrived to break down the system at 01:00 as requested, the party was still at full tilt - the client was having so much fun that they actually paid extra for us to go away and come back later to collect. Dan and I had to kill an hour or so until the party ended in the wee small hours !

Phat Sound Systems & DJ Equipment Hire, Ashton Court Mansion

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides sound system hire and lighting hire for the Bristol University, Modern Languages Spring Ball at Ashton Court Mansion.Ashton Court Mansion

Diary 08/05/07

We set up 2 serious PA rigs, one in the bar area and a larger system for the music room.

In the bar area we provided a 2.7 K rig complete with 2 Technics decks, 2 Pioneer CDJ decks and a 4 way DJ Mixer. We used our brand new “blue” full range cabs with Eminence Magum Pro. 12″ 600 Watt RMS !!! drivers and Fane CD140’s. These were sat on top of two new 18 ” subs fitted with our usual Fane colossus drivers. We were very happy with the performance of this rig it vibrated all the bottles behind the bar!

We also provided 4 par cans with blue & green gels to light the arches in the bar under which podiums were erected for dancers.

In the main “music” room we completly went over the top. We set up a 5.4 k continuos rig with a disco lighting truss hung with scanners, strobes, moonflowers & haze. The DJ was a little overwhelmed and phoned me just before he went on questioning the sheer scale of the sound system - I assured him it was better to have more than you need - I don’t think he turned his mixer main volume up more than a quarter all night.

When we arrived at the end to break down it seemed like a wicked night had been had by all - drunk students do and say the strangest things!!

Bring on more work at Ashton court - we love it.

Club Lighting Hire, Blue Mountain

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe Pa Hire Bristol provides a club lighting rig plus 1000 watt haze machine for a techno night at blue mountain on Sunday May 6th

Sound & Light, Vaudeville Cabaret, Halo, Bristol

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides sound hire and lighting hire for the Vaudeville Cabaret, consolation party at Halo Bristol.After an incredible first event held in the Explore building event facility at @bristol back in March, the 2nd Vaudeville Cabaret had to be cancelled due to disappointing ticket sales. Those who had brought tickets for the May 5th event were motivated to organise a consolation do which was held at Halo on

Gloucester rd.This was a great success with live music from “the rinky dinks” an experimental ukulele, lounge / country band, a burlesque dancer and a late night disco.

www.myspace.com/therinkydinks

Diary 05/05/07This event was engineered by Ben.I set up the sound system in the back room of Halo with a 1.6 k rig and a 3 meter lighting truss. I used an 8 channel desk with the dbx drive rack outboard EQ and processing. Monitoring was via galaxy hot spots.

The band consisted of 3 ukulele players, a bass guitarist and a simple snare / hi-hat drum set up. I mic’d up all the individual ukulele amps with sm57’s and D.I.’d the bass. For the drums I found one studio condenser on a stand was enough. There where 3 vocalists who were each furnished with Beta 58a’s.For lights I hung 6 par cans off the truss with various colour gels and used a couple of NJD Chaos auto moons for the dance floor. The par cans where also used for a blue spot on the burlesque dancer.The rinky dinks were great fun - they covered tunes such as “I predict a riot” by the Kaiser Chiefs which was quite bizarre on 3 ukuleles!The evening was a great success - we should be doing the next event in July which is back at Explore @Bristol (a superb but massively underused facility)

www.vaudevillecabaret.co.uk

Vaudeville Cabaret

Small Birthday PA System & Lighting Hire

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Diary 04/05/07

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides a small sound system with disco lights for a 16th birthday party in Kingswood, Bristol.

Sound & Lighting Hire, Bristol Grammar School

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides a PA system and disco lighting for a huge Indian wedding held at, Bristol Grammar School.

Diary 29/04/07

We rigged up the PA system on the Sunday afternoon in the main hall at Bristol Grammar School - wow! What a spectacular room.

The client wanted full-on bass at this event. We used 2 x 18″ subs with Colossus 18xb drivers and drove these with there own CS4000 which chucks out 800 watts per side at 8 ohms !- on top we used 2 full range cabs each with colossus 15’s and used another CS4000 for these. The system had plenty of headroom as the main drivers are rated at 600 watts. 3.2 k in total certainly delivered the desired “grunt” as well as fantastic detail in sound quality.

For lighting we used 4 LED par cans and set them to gradually go through the colour spectrum – this creates an ever changing atmosphere keeping the vibe fresh. As well as this we added disco lights: 2 VRX scanners and an NJD Datamoon.

PA System Hire : Hartham Park, Corsham

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Igoe PA Hire Bristol provides a disco sound system for a wedding at, the gorgeous, Hartham Park, Corsham.

Diary 28/04/07

We set up the sound system before any guests arrived using the trusty double 15″ cabs and a CS4000 power amp. We where required to provide facilities to plug in an ipod.

Hartham Park is a fabulous mansion in a beautiful setting with 5 star facilities and professional & helpful friendly staff. It’s one of our favourite wedding venues to whom we have provided sound and lighting hire on several occasions.

www.harthampark.com


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