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Speaker Systems for Background Music and Paging

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Electro-Voice Installed Sound Technical Guide

with patrons. Will the person issuing pages be sitting under or near a
speaker? If so, then consider equalization, or a separate muting circuit, to
avoid feedback. Is light-switch height a comfortable location for zone
volume controls, or does the user have another preference? Getting this kind
of information at the beginning will help to avoid confusion and delays at
the installation stage.

Just as important as the human factors are the construction details of the
site. How are the walls and ceilings constructed? What kinds of mounting
surfaces will be encountered? Is the drop ceiling a lay-in type, or tongue-
and-groove? Where must cabling be routed, and how accessible are those
spaces? Do partition walls or bearing members extend above the drop
ceiling, where they may obstruct cable runs? Is conduit or plenum cable
required? All of these factors directly affect the price quote and the actual
task of installation.

Defining The System

Upon completion of a thorough site survey, the system may be specified and
quoted. The sales engineer also usually generates the design and quote, often
at the same time as the site survey. Success at this stage depends experience
and product knowledge.

To avoid ambiguity and confusion at the installation stage, the specification
needs to be as explicit as possible. Of course, it should enumerate all of the
equipment proposed to do the job, and should include both a block
diagram and an accurate floor plan with annotations regarding construction.
In addition, it should provide details such as local volume control locations
and height, the desired location for amp racks, and even names of the
employees who are expected to use the system. To forestall disputes and
clarify responsibility if changes are required during or after installation, the
customer should be asked to sign a written agreement governing the
specification.

Many contracting companies simply communicate the sales engineer’s
design directly to their installation department, who are charged with
putting the system in and making it work. There are potential problems
with this approach. For example, the salesman’s natural tendency is to over-
design and oversell when he can. If the client is amenable, the result can be
an excessively complicated (and problematic) system. Moreover, it is easy to
make mistakes in the flush of a sale, and these may be compounded when
the system goes in.

©2002 Telex Communications, Inc.

Summary of Contents for PRO-8A

Page 1: ...arket and offer suggestions for improving your chances of success in the business The Site Survey Every system specification begins with a survey of the site The sales engineer whose job is to ask the right questions and gather all the information necessary to complete an accurate bid normally performs the survey At this stage it is most important to form an accurate picture of the customer s need...

Page 2: ...ates the design and quote often at the same time as the site survey Success at this stage depends experience and product knowledge To avoid ambiguity and confusion at the installation stage the specification needs to be as explicit as possible Of course it should enumerate all of the equipment proposed to do the job and should include both a block diagram and an accurate floor plan with annotation...

Page 3: ...sually specify 8 inch cone loudspeakers for distributed overhead systems at least in part because they represent the traditional choice In many cases however you can achieve equal or better results at a significant savings by using 4 inch elements Characterized by somewhat smoother frequency response and less susceptibility to feedback than 8 inch elements 4 inch units are also generally less expe...

Page 4: ...is authorized to make decisions when questions arise on the job site If the building manager tells your installers to put the amp racks in the basement you don t want the owners calling you and insisting that they should have been in the second floor office Standardizing for Profitability One of the best strategies that we can recommend for success in contracting is to standardize your operations ...

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