1 / 17

SPEAKERS AND SOUND

SPEAKERS AND SOUND. Nathan Grisier Emmanuel Villarruel Praja Katel Jackson Lund. What you’ll learn. Sound Interference and Overtones Amplifiers/Speakers Acoustic Architecture Line arrays. Sound Interference and Overtones. Sound Produced from vibrations

dewitt
Download Presentation

SPEAKERS AND SOUND

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SPEAKERS AND SOUND Nathan Grisier Emmanuel Villarruel PrajaKatel Jackson Lund

  2. What you’ll learn • Sound Interference and Overtones • Amplifiers/Speakers • Acoustic Architecture • Line arrays

  3. Sound Interference and Overtones • Sound • Produced from vibrations • Loud enough for everyone to hear • Interference • Weather • Destructive interference • Opposite vibrations

  4. Overtones • Other frequencies besides the fundamental that exist in musical instruments • Different musical instruments produce different overtones • Create individual sound of instruments • Most instruments would sound the same if it weren't for overtones

  5. Instruments

  6. Amplifiers/Speakers • An electronic amplifier that amplifies low-power audio signals to a level suitable for driving loud speakers is the final stage a typical audio playback chain

  7. The History of Modern speakers • Lee de Forest • Invented the first audio amplifier, 1909 • Triode Vacuum tube • AM radio • MattiOtala • Discovered Transient Intermodulation Distortion (TIM)

  8. How sound is amplified • Sound waves are perceived by the microphone and are then converted into corresponding electrical voltage varying in frequency and amplitude according to pressure of the sound vibrations • Many amplifiers have provision for receiving the signals from several microphones or other sources , combining them, and amplifying the combined program to the power required for the audience to hear easily

  9. History of Acoustic Architecture and design • Roman Era • Vitruvius • Wrote “De Architectura”, known today as “The Ten Books on Architecture”. • Beginning of acoustic architecture • Renaissance • Opera houses • Concert halls • Churches • 18th Century • Experimentation • 20th Century • Wallace Sabin

  10. Noise Control • A = Absorb • Reduces reverberation • Porous absorbing materials • drapes, carpets, ceiling tiles, etc. • B = Block • Prevents sound waves from continuing on their path • panels, walls, floors, ceilings and noise barriers. • C = Cover-up • sound masking • white or pink noise

  11. Outdoor Noise Control • Regulating sound levels • To much noise can be a health hazard, so rules have been set in place that engineers have to be aware of when building a venue • Noise barriers • Walls that are placed around the venue to try and prevent the sound from escaping to residential areas • Buffer zones • Place commercial/industrial buildings around the venue rather than residential.

  12. Line Arrays • Why and what are line arrays? • Line arrays are a group of speakers, usually 3- 12 or as much as 20, stacked on top of each other and hung at a diagonal angle. • Time delay • Sound is a directional waveform and travels around 1000 ft/sec. causing time the time delay to differentiate between the front row to the middle to the very back row of the venue or concert field. • The job of the sound engineer or technician is to balance

  13. Solving the problem • In order to reach the everyone line arrays are strategically placed on the stage and throughout the audience. • The sound output to the middle row line arrays are put on a time delay • In order to find the right time delay, measure 1 milsec/ft from the middle row

  14. Conclusion • next time one of you attend a concert, whether inside or outside, you will be able to understand why the speakers and the music sounds clear and full of life

  15. THE END

More Related