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AVNetwork
AVNetwork
Technology
AVNetwork Staff

Tell It to the Congregation—Loudly and Clearly

Inside the 3,000-set sanctuary at Wake Chapel Church.

Wake Chapel Church serves two locations in the greater Raleigh area. Its Tarheel Club Road church has a 3,000-seat sanctuary that was in need of an upgraded sound system that could deliver articulate speech and music reproduction to the 187x137-foot space. With the help of Greenville, NC-based Hi Tech Electronics, the church found it with the new Constant Curvature Array (CCA) loudspeaker series from Blaze Audio.

The Blaze Audio CCA10i is a compact, three-way arrayable point source loudspeaker designed for medium-sized venues to large distributed systems that need a flexible, scalable loudspeaker solution. Mounted horizontally with tight acoustic centers to minimize comb filtering, each CCA10i enclosure provides a fixed 20-degree vertical coverage pattern and can be flown with additional enclosures in vertical arrays. The system’s constant curvature waveguide provides unprecedented array coherence along with precision 160-degree symmetrical horizontal pattern control.

“To properly address a congregation of roughly 3,000 people in a space this wide and deep, we needed loudspeakers capable of delivering wide horizontal dispersion in addition to significant throw," explained Hi Tech Electronics president David Williams "Equally important, we wanted to maintain a clear line of sight to the stage area from the entire seating area. We were initially expecting to fly as many as 36 line array enclosures deployed in three hangs of 12—left/center/right—across the front of the stage area, but this would have impaired visibility, so we sought another solution. We found it with the CCA10i Constant Curvature Array series loudspeakers from Blaze Audio.”

With the Blaze Audio CCA10i loudspeakers, Williams and his installation crew deployed a setup at the front edge of the stage area that consisted of three hangs (left/center/right), with each loudspeaker cluster containing four CCA10i enclosures. There is also a delay system located 90 feet from the front edge of the stage. This group of loudspeakers were flown in three hangs (left/center/right), with each loudspeaker cluster containing three CCA10i enclosures.

“The difference between using the Blaze Audio CCA10i loudspeakers as opposed to more traditional line array enclosures is huge,” Williams explained. “By eliminating these large loudspeaker clusters across the front of the stage area, people can see the activity on stage better—and this goes a long way toward keeping the congregation engaged. Just like the exceptionally wide and tightly controlled horizontal coverage, the CCA10i enclosures are equally impressive in terms of vertical dispersion. According to Hugh Sarvis, Blaze Audio’s lead loudspeaker design engineer, ‘By fixing the vertical coverage at 20 degrees per unit, the need for splay angle calculation is eliminated, optimizing system configuration, shortening project deployment time, and improving the installation experience.’ This is exactly what we experienced with the Blaze Audio CCA10i loudspeakers.”

(Image credit: Blaze Audio)

To help the church contain costs on the project, Williams elected to re-use the existing WorxAudio subwoofers (also designed by Hugh Sarvis) for low frequency support. Hence, he deployed four WorxAudio TL 218SSi-P subwoofers. Two enclosures (one each) were flown 5 feet behind the left and right loudspeaker clusters over the front stage while the remaining two enclosures were placed on the floor to the left and right sides of the stage.

For power amplification, Williams used 12 Blaze Audio PowerZone Connect 3004 Class-D amplifiers. For system control, Williams contracted with Selah Media Productions of Mount Holly, NC. Selah Media supplied a Symetrix Prism 16x16 for the main array up front and a Symetrix Prism 8x8 for the delay loudspeaker system to accomplish the necessary DSP in the space. Using Symetrix Composer software, a custom DSP platform was programmed into the Symetrix units, supplying all the matrix, gain, EQ, and delay needed to tune the system. Blaze Audio’s Hugh Sarvis and Buck Roberts, president of Selah Media, were both onsite to tune and commission the system.

[I Love It Loud: The Evolution of Loudspeakers] 

The installation of the new Blaze Audio sound system at Wake Chapel commenced in November 2022 and was completed and placed into service in March 2023. Since that time, Williams reports the system has made a positive impression on all who encounter it, “I’ve received compliments from both church management and congregation members alike. Everyone comments about the clear and easy to understand speech and the equally impressive music reproduction. It’s been very gratifying.”

 “Everyone—both church personnel and congregation members—has been very impressed with the new Blaze Audio setup," concluded Steven Petersen, lead audio engineer at Wake Chapel. "The system’s speech intelligibility is better than it’s ever been, and this is crucial, as it enables people to gain the most out of what’s being said. Likewise, music reproduction is terrific. Music sounds more natural and has more presence than we’ve ever had. Equally important, the system doesn’t visually distract from what’s taking place on stage—and that enables everyone to be more engaged. David and his crew did an excellent job, and we couldn’t be happier.”

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