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Choosing the Right Sound Console
By: Curt Taipale Your sound console is the focal point of operation for your sound system. It plays a key role in the integrity of the sound heard over your speaker system. With that in mind, there are several issues that you should consider in order to put this tool to use. From a technical standpoint, the useful life expectancy of the console you purchase this week is six to 10 years at best. Its growing repair costs, coupled with improvements in console design, will warrant purchasing a replacement unit within that timeframe. It's also likely that your need for inputs and outputs will have grown beyond the capacity of that console, so it will be time for a change anyway. There are more than 40 manufacturers of sound mixing consoles. Finding the right one for your needs can be a bewildering search. Here are six important steps to consider: 1. Assess your current worship team needs. 2. Project your worship team's growth needs over at least the next five to eight years. 3. Apply a realistic capital budget figure. 4. Look for dealers with appropriate solutions who also have the capacity to make timely repairs. 5. Do your homework, and then have fun making the purchase. 6. Make a capital budget entry now to replace that console in six to 10 years at 150% of its current price. Assessing Your Current Needs Take into account the input needs of your biggest musical event of the year, perhaps your Christmas or Easter musical pageant. That should add up to the maximum number of channels you'll ever expect to use. Depending on the scale of your pageants, that could increase your input needs by as much as 30 percent. Also, get your worship team and sound team together and talk through your production plans for the next five years. For many churches, that may be a difficult task in itself, but buying a console is a significant expense, and it's definitely worth the time to do this exercise. Listen carefully to their brainstorming and use that information to make an informed guess regarding how many inputs you think are enough to do the job they're requesting of you. Sure, you could supplement the lack of channels on a smaller console by adding an "extra" console for those specific events, but you may find it less expensive and less complicated in the long run to simply purchase the larger console now. At this point, you should have a rough idea of the size of console you should be looking for, at least in regards to the number of inputs. Outputs You'll also want "postfade" auxiliary sends to feed your effects processors so that you can easily add reverb and other effects to the overall house mix. I prefer at least two postfade aux sends for this application because I like to use different reverb settings for the vocals as compared to the music instruments. If I can get a third postfade send, I'll use it as a feed to a digital echo device to add a bit of echo as needed. In general, the more auxiliary sends you can afford, the more fun you'll have in mixing, because it adds a tremendous amount of flexibility. The best of both worlds would be a PRE/POST switch on each monitor send, because then you could make each monitor send on each channel either a prefade send or a postfade send. Unfortunately, you'll find that kind of feature only on the very expensive consoles. Consider it a mixing advantage to choose a console with submasters. I teach in my classes on console operation to always keep the fader (volume control) down on unused channels. The engineer can eliminate excessive stage noise and significantly improve the gain-before-feedback condition simply by turning off the unused channels during strategic moments. Submasters allow the engineer to easily drop those sounds out of the mix without upsetting the careful musical balance that he/she has created during the worship set. Submasters make those mix changes repeatable and easy to do. Inexpensive consoles often have fixed frequency choices on each channel's equalizer section. That can pose a serious limitation to enhancing the tonal quality of a sound, because rarely are the frequencies chosen by the manufacturer precisely what the engineer needs to make an improvement in the sound. A console that has a sweepable midrange frequency control on each channel will provide the needed flexibility. Budget Realities You'll also start to see submasters on the console. At first you'll see four submasters; as the price climbs, it will jump to eight. Next you may start to see added switching. Go a little higher and you might even see a Mute switch next to every auxiliary send pot. You could also find programmable mutes a method of turning on or off a group of inputs, regardless of the subgroup they are assigned to. While there are some exceptions in the lower-priced consoles, somewhere in the $20,000 to $30,000 range, you may start to hear a difference in the consoles. Here, the design intent grows beyond function to improving sound quality. Circuit design is approached differently. Much higher grade components are used, and the layout may become more critical. Consider that, next to your speaker system (including the processing and amps that drive it), the house console is the next most important and significant investment you'll make toward your sound system's quality. Take your time, do your homework, and then have fun. You're going to be mixing on that desk for a long time. And be sure you establish a budget now for its replacement. Curt Taipale is the owner of Taipale Media Systems, www.taipalemedia.com, a consulting firm for churches on acoustics, audio and video technologies. |
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