Crown LM-300A, PCC-160, PCC-170, PZM-10, PZM-10LL Application Manual

...
PZM, PCC, SASS, GLM, LM, and CM
© 2000 Crown International, All rights reserved. PZM® , PCC®, SASS®, are registered trademarks of Crown International, Inc. Also exported as Amcron
128137-1
6/00
®
Crown International, Inc P.O. Box 1000, Elkhart, Indiana 46515-1000 (219) 294-8200 Fax (219) 294-8329 www.crownaudio.com
MICROPHONE TECHNIQUES FOR HOUSES OF WORSHIP
In your house of worship, wouldn’t you like to bet­ter understand what is being said, and hear music reproduced with a full, natural sound? You can do this with a good sound system.
One goal of the sound system is to help the con­gregation hear more clearly. The message is im­portant, so it must be loud enough and easy to understand. Another goal is to reproduce music with high fidelity or naturalness.
To help you meet these goals, this guide offers some tips on microphone techniques. The types of microphones you choose—and their place­ment—have a major effect on the sound quality.
MICROPHONE TYPES
Microphones (or “mics” for short) are available in many types.
Miniature clip-on mics (lavalier mics), which you clip onto the minister’s robe or onto musi­cal instruments.
Lectern mics, which you mount on the pulpit or lectern.
Surface-mounted mics which you put on sur­faces (floor, ceiling, walls, tables).
Miniature choir mics which you hang over the choir.
Handheld mics for vocalists and instruments.
Crown makes a microphone for each of these needs. Many of the mics are so small, they become nearly invisible in use. In this way, the microphones do not distract from the service.
Microphones can also be classified according to the way they pick up sounds from different direc­tions. An omnidirectional (omni) mic picks up sound equally well from all around. A unidirectional mic picks up mainly what its aimed at. The most common type of unidirectional mic is the cardioid
type. Unidirectional mics help prevent feedback.
Feedback is the squealing sound you hear when the sound system is turned up too loud. The amplified sound from the loudspeakers enters the micro­phones and is reamplified.
Microphones also differ in the way they convert sound to electricity. A condenser or electret con­denser microphone is charged with static electric­ity inside; a dynamic or moving coil microphone has a magnet and a coil of wire. Generally, the con­denser type is higher quality, but requires a power supply to operate, such as an internal battery or an external phantom power supply. This supply is al- ready built into some mixers. Another advantage of the condenser type is that it can be miniaturized.
A miniature condenser mic is desired when you want the mic to be invisiblesay, hanging over the choir, clipped onto the ministers robe, or affixed to the pulpit.
HOW TO REDUCE FEEDBACK
First, here are some general tips on microphone us­age to reduce the likelihood of feedback.
Use as few microphones as possible.
Keep loudspeakers and microphones as far apart
as is practical.
Turn down microphones not in use.
Keep microphones close to their sound sources as close as possible, but no closer than nec-
essary to achieve adequate volume before feed­back occurs.
Use directional microphones. A microphone is directional if its polar pattern is cardioid, supercardioid, or hypercardioid (check the mi­crophone data sheet).
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SPECIFIC MIC TECHNIQUES
Below are some suggested microphone techniques for each sound source.
Minister
The type of mic you will use on the minister de­pends on whether the minister stays at the pulpit or moves about.
If the minister stays at the pulpit, install a lectern mic on the pulpit (
Fig.1
). Another purpose for a lec­tern mic is to pick up anyone who walks up to the lectern to make an announcement or read a pas­sage.
One microphone at the pulpit gives a more consistent tone quality than two, so install only one. Be sure to add the provided foam
pop filter (windscreen)
to pre­vent explosive breath sounds (pops). Another way to reduce pops is to speak about 8 inches from the microphone and over the microphone rather than into it.
If you dont want to install the pulpit mic perma­nently, try mounting a handheld mic (
CM-700Fig. 2
) on a boom stand about 8 inches
CM-200A or
away from the ministers mouth. Put a foam pop filter (windscreen) on the microphone.
Crown makes three microphones for this purpose: the LM-201, LM-300A, and LM-301A. The LM-201 (see page 8) has a shock-mounted mic capsule and a ball-and-socket swivel mount that adjusts silently. The LM-300A (see page 8) is a slim gooseneck model that also adjusts silently. It plugs directly into a connector on the pulpit. The LM-301A adapts to a 5/8"-27 threaded adapter, and its cable can exit downward or out the side.
Fig. 1Miking the minister with a lectern mic on the pulpit.
Fig. 2Pulpit miking with a CM-200A.
Yet another alternative is to place a unidirectional boundary mic (such as the Crown (PCC®-130, PCC­160, PCC-170) on top of the pulpit, near the edge furthest from the person speaking
(Fig. 3)
.
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