Toa F-121C, F-121CM Application Note

APPLICATION NOTE ON TOA'S
UNIFORM DIRECTIVITY CEILING
SPEAKER
In open areas with low ceiling heights, dead spots often occur in areas between speakers mounted in the ceiling. Often, there is a noticeable difference in the quality of the sound between the area directly below the speaker, or on axis, and the area off-axis. Sound engineers and system designers have known for many years that higher frequency material is more narrowly dispersed from cone speakers than lower frequency material. A listener standing on-axis gets a better, more total sound than one standing off-axis. The attenuation of higher frequencies is a problem because of intelligibility loss as well as degradation of quality.
One solution is to decrease the distance between ceiling speakers, thus putting more of the floor space and listening area into the on-axis coverage. However, this will drive up the cost of the system since more speakers, wire, back boxes and labor will be consumed in the installation, and more amplifier power will be needed. is to use TOA’s new F121C Uniform Directivity Ceiling Speaker with the AC-120 Dedicated Equalizer. This speak­er is equipped with a unique sound diffuser, housed in an attractive mesh cone. The diffuser helps to smooth out the dispersion of the higher frequencies, which eliminates the dead spots even when the speakers are spread out. The graphics shown on this page and the next dramatically demonstrate how the frequency and polar response of the
F-121C compares with standard 4” ceiling speakers, and shows that better sound with less speakers is possible when the F-121C is used in restaurants, offices, shopping malls, retail stores, and other space requiring ceiling mount­ed speakers.
The F-121CM is transformer equipped with multi-
ple line taps for loudness selection.
A better solution
Frequency Response of F-121C/F-121CM
0/Degrees
30/Degrees
60/Degrees
90/Degrees
20 100
200 lk 2k
10 k
Frequency Response of 4” Ceiling Speaker
0/Degrees
30/Degrees
60/Degrees
90/Degrees
100
200 lk 2k
10k 20k
20 k
I
Polar Response F-121C
•500Hz •1000Hz
•2000Hz •4000Hz
•8000Hz
•500Hz
Polar Response 4”Ceiling Speaker
•1OOOHz
•2000Hz •4000Hz
•8000Hz
Sound Level Distribution Patterns TOA F-121C/F-121CM
s 8000Hz t
s 4000Hz t s 2000Hz t
s 1000Hz t
Sound Level Distribution Patterns 4” Ceiling Speakers
Sibilants (“s” sounds) and plosives (“p” sounds) are fre- The above sound level distribution patterns were obtained quent in all human speech. Compared to the F-121C from four speakers placed (as marked by the “+” signs) in Uniform Directivity Ceiling Speakers, standard 4” and espe- an anechoic space measuring 65 ft. (W) X 65 ft. (W) by 6.5 cially 8” co-ax ceiling speakers do not adequately disperse
these high frequency sounds.
ft. (H). The patterns above show the area represented by
1 W/m of sound pressure level.
04-97-f121ap
Printed in U.S.A. 4/97 BL
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