KV2 Audio » References » KV2 Audio, a proven solution for the Romanian Pentecostal Church of God Kitchener in Canada

KV2 Audio, a proven solution for the Romanian Pentecostal Church of God Kitchener in Canada

JdB Sound Acoustics, Toronto ONT, Canada
JdB Sound Acoustics, Toronto ONT, Canada
JdB Sound Acoustics, Toronto ONT, Canada

The 900-seat church is typical of a church that has no acoustical management. The low ceiling fan shaped room had issues with standing waves, excessive noise from to many early reflections, and lots of bass stored in the corner. To complicate things more, the ceiling is parallel to the floor but the various levels of the flat ceiling helped – only slightly.

As with most typical churches, carpeted floor and padded seating give the room the performance of the room being 50% full when it is empty. What is also typical is that the carpeting and padded seating do enough absorption above 2000Hz that adding more absorption panels to manage the lower frequencies would also mean killing the room even more for congregational signing and any hope for quality acoustical performances. With the reverberation above 2K already less than 1.4 seconds and the frequencies below 1K were almost 2 seconds, there were not too many options available. In this case, it was found that frequency specific diffusion would be the best way to go.

The acoustic fix was mainly carried off with Tube Radiators supplied by CS Acoustics of New Hamburg, Ontario Canada. These are custom made half round diffuser made of thick wall compressed cardboard tubes that are skived and sealed. When installed properly, they do meet fire code requirement. The performance of the diffuser system was enough to reduce bass energy, midrange energy and eliminate standing waves. This would bring the overall reverb time down to an average of 1.3 seconds from 200 to 4000 Hertz, which makes it a great room for a Pentecostal type worship program. Short enough RT60 for a high quality contemporary worship service and live enough for great congregational singing.

Eight and twelve inch diffusers were used in a detailed system to cut over 25dB between 200 to 800 Hertz. This design also absorbs bass energy down to 40 Hertz. Since most of the bass energy is diffused or scatter along the walls, there is no bottom end buildup in the corner and therefore no need for bass traps in the corners. This system makes it easier to hear that low note below 100 hertz. They come across as cleaner, clearer sounds at a lower volume. As a bonus you can feel more bass.

After the acoustical system was installed, the musicians and singers all noticed a huge difference. Everything was easier. The 40-piece brass band found the room easier to perform in and the choir could hear themselves as never before. The minister found it an easier room to preach into as well.

With the transformation of the room completed it was time to review the sound system. The existing speaker was old and they were not really speakers meant for installation work. Portable plastic speaker boxes are not really suited for fixed church installations.

The options were limited. The ceiling was too low for any type of line array system, so it was necessary to stick with well-controlled brute force full range boxes. With the drop ceiling and limited suspension points, the lightest boxes than can move air the best were at the front of the line. Being familiar with a number of speaker brands, a not so well known speaker brand call KV2 Audio was brought to my attention. They are speakers that is designed, tested and built in the Czech Republic. Like all speaker manufacturers, they all have their unique story as to why their speakers are so good. KV2 Audio is no different. However, in the selection process, it came down to weight, size, speaker design and sonic performance.

Speaker Design

Speakers with horns that crossover below 1000Hz always move to the front of the line. In this case, the ES1.0 speakers have a horn crossover at 500Hz – which means better gain before feedback by default. When you have a low ceiling, directivity control is very important. Not because the acoustical treatment was not good enough but because of the proximity of the loudspeakers to open microphones on stage. When loudspeakers are within 15 ft of open mics and you are trying to mic a choir, you need speakers that are well controlled and these speakers have that kind of control. What is also helpful is that the ES1.0 is a Three-way speaker.

Most three-way speakers tend to be heavy but the ES1.0 is only 74 pound or 34kg. While this is 3 pound lighter than a favorite 2 way speaker I have often recommended in the past, this 3 way speaker does have a superior quality sound when driven with their proprietary amplifiers. For this installation, we had a 600-pound weight limit that could be suspended from the roof that included the truss system, lighting and the full speaker system that included the Subs and two foldback speakers. The KV2 Audio “Less is More” truly hit the mark on this.

The other detail was speaker size. The church didn’t want speaker to hang lower than what they had before. Most speakers that have crossover points below 1KHz tend to be very large boxes. Some over 40 inches tall when you get closer to a 500Hz crossover. Here, the ES1.0 is only 27.5 inches tall with the horn being rotatable. While the church was offered hanging the speaker horizontally, they decided that the speakers would look better placed vertically. In this configuration, it made for a smaller looking cluster with the whole assembly hanging at the same height of the previous speaker system.

Performance

These loudspeakers had been compared to other well know speaker and each time, the KV2 speakers out performed what the churches had on hand or other speakers they were considering as replacements. The KV2’s sounded better and performed better. It is seamless system that is matched up to an amplifier/processor (EPAK2500R) that is all built by KV2 Audio. They also supplied the cables and connectors.

The next major item for the sound system was the replacement of the mixer. The previous analog mixer did a good job but keeping it going was going to cost almost as much as buying a new digital mixer. After a lot of discussion, the church went with the Allen and Heath GLD-80. It is a good sounding mixer with all of the bells and whistle you can hope for in a vibrant church.

Conclusion

This church went through a major makeover. They replaced the carpet, pews and repainted the whole sanctuary. By changing the acoustics and sound system, it made the makeover complete as if they just moved into a brand new church. Before they had a space that was under mining their worship, their music programs and for people to have their talents blossom. Now that has all changed. Now there are no more hindrances in any of the ministries that make a house of God a House of God. As a complete package, CS Acoustics did an excellent job in providing a sound solution that didn’t just address an outdated sound system but a system that included acoustics as well. Hopefully this redefines the term “Turnkey Sound System Solution.”

Source: Technologies for Worship

Contact

Head Office KV2 Audio International spol. s r.o.
Nádražní 936
Milevsko 399 01
Czech Republic

VAT: CZ26051591
Phone: +420 383 809 320 (English)
E-mail: info@kv2audio.com

Distribution

The Future of Sound. Made Perfectly Clear.

© KV2 Audio 2024 – All rights reserved