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Seacoast Church Opts Against Line Arrays for Original Campus

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MOUNT PLEASANT, SC – With 13 campuses in three states, Seacoast Church welcomes about 8,000 worshippers each week. For the church's original campus, led by founding Pastor Greg Surratt, Seacoast was advised by another AV design firm to get line arrays. The church got a second opinion, and acted on it. It's now equipped with a cross-matrixed LCR system comprised of Danley Sound Labs loudspeakers and subwoofers.
The original sound system had been installed in the early 1990s, but the church's increasingly contemporary services left more and more to be desired. Most notably, the sound was obviously lacking in low end. Worse, more components failed with every passing year, damaging intelligibility and coverage.

 

"The acoustics, noise control, and vibration control were all still in great shape so all we had to focus on was the console forward," said Chris Rayburn, president and CEO of Summit Integrated Systems. "LifeChurch.tv – one of our other multi-campus mega-church designs – referred us to Seacoast," Rayburn added.

 

As for the recommendation against line arrays, Rayburn noted, "the first thing to understand is that Seacoast's Mount Pleasant site seats 1,000 people in a room that is 50-feet deep by 150-feet wide. While a line array can work well in the right application, it offers very little horizontal control – the very thing that is needed in a wide room. Instead, we recommended a LCR system with a delay ring for the balcony.

 

"Further, we recommended a Danley system as their boxes do such a good job of providing consistent, even coverage across their beam width," Rayburn continued. "They sound fantastic, and, invariably, we've got big smiles when we first crank up a Danley install – and the clients have even bigger smiles."

 

The Danley-centered system provides all of the horizontal control required, said Rayburn, who cross-matrixed the central three clusters to deliver spoken word and vocals on the center channel and instrumentation on the left and right channels to any seat in the house.

 

Three clusters cover most of the seating, but the stage's long thrust forces the central cluster forward so that the entire coverage area spans 200 degrees.

 

The central cluster contains four Danley SH-50 full-range loudspeakers. All deliver center channel information with the outer boxes delivering cross-matrixed left or right signal. The side clusters each contain three Danley SH-50s, but only two of them per side contain left- or right-channel information. The remaining SH-50s are cross-matrixed so that every seat receives clear center-channel information along with an appropriate balance of left-right information.

 

Ten distributed Danley SH-95 cover the balcony in a delay ring. Four Danley TH-118 subwoofers deliver bass from their position underneath the stage.

 

Six Lab.gruppen C48:4 amps power all the full-range boxes, whereas two Lab.gruppen SP7000 amps power the Danley subwoofers. A Biamp Audia DSP with an additional Biamp EXPO breakout box provides all system processing, and a Yamaha M7CL digital console gives the church's audio department abundant, intuitive, and recallable command of their sometimes complex stage setups.

 

Rayburn noted that Seacoast's technical department was able to install the system themselves. "They did a fantastic job," he said. "All of the wiring is clean and fully up to professional standards. Not only did they do a great job, they did it quickly. In the span of a workweek, they managed to rip out the old system and install the new system so that services weren't interrupted. Of course, everyone is thrilled with the sound of the new system. It really coheres with the very contemporary services at Seacoast."

 

For more information, please visit www.danleysoundlabs.com.