Christ's Chapel Dulwich adds Outline system
- Details
It has recently been equipped with a new audio system, designed by About Sound and installed by NoiseBoys Technologies, utilising products from Outline’s Architectural Series.
In common with many ancient sites of Christian worship all over the UK, the Chapel provides a number of challenges when installing a speech reinforcement system. Its naturally reverberant internal layout requires careful placement of loudspeakers with suitable dispersion characteristics to achieve the required intelligibility, the fabric of the Stuart-era building has to be respected in terms of how equipment is mounted and installed, while the aesthetics of the space as a place of worship demand that everything is as close to invisible as possible.
Cambridge-based About Sound are one of the UK’s leading specialists in House Of Worship projects, their expertise extending to public address and webcasting systems, hearing assistance, projectors and screens and organ video relay. Their design for Dulwich relied on Outline’s Ai81 and Ai41 loudspeakers powered by Powersoft Mezzo amplifiers, part of a complete audio solution installed by engineers from NoiseBoys.
About Sound’s owner Matthew Dilley commented, “Only one AS6 sub was required with two Ai81s doing stereo L/R at the front, with a secondary pair of Ai81s for fills and ten Ai41s for the aisles and balcony-fills. The amps are Powersoft Mezzo which already have the presets for the speakers, making commissioning easy. Also, because the horizontal dispersion is a little wider than some column speakers, we were able to mount a bit higher which offsets the proximity to the first pair of ears, so to speak, giving us a bit more consistency of level.”
“The Outline Ai series are a very welcome addition to our installation offering” remarks Phill Beynon from NoiseBoys. “They are similar in size and appearance to some other brands’ models, but in tests we have found them to be of superior sound quality. The ability to very easily mount them through the front of the speaker, then hide all fixings with the magnetic grill is a great bit of attention to detail from Outline, so overall we’re really impressed.
“Installing in lots of historic buildings as we do, well-thought-through speakers like this make our job as installers much easier. We can hide them in places that other speakers and speaker brackets simply won’t fit and once they’re installed they’re invisible to most passers by, which is exactly how it should be.”
Matthew Dilley concludes, “The customer says people go in and ask where the speakers are, which is exactly what we aim for in this kind of heritage setting.”