system setup advice for a gym, what do i need?

H

herosgym

Enthusiast
Hi,

I am currently in the process of opening a gym and will require some sort of audio system. If i can tell you what i have in mind maybe you can help to tell me how i can do it and what i will need.

the gym is inside an idustrial unit and has a mezzanine floor. now i could just pop a hifi system in one corner but the people that are obviously near it wont be able to talk and the others at the other end wont be able to hear the music, so some how i need to spread the sound over about 6 or more speakers down stairs. also upstairs is quite open so could manage with just 2 speakers. the floor is about 17 meters square. i would also like to be able to have different vloume levels for upstairs and down stairs.


i would like to be able to play music from itunes on a pc, an ipod and also CD's. the music will never be played disco loud but at times it will want to be played as loud as you would in your living room when your dancing about.


so just to list what i require:

6 or more speakers spread about down stairs that can have the volume ajusted in pairs or something.

2 speakers up stairs that can have a seperate volume level and possible input however i think the sound will be heard from down stairs

inputs from pc, ipod and cd

all to be controlled from the reception.


i have looked at the 100v line systems but im not sure how loud these will go and what quality the sound will come out as i only get the impression they are for speaking over or something. so please could you help and tell me what i need and the best way to do it.

price isnt too important however i dont want to be spending loads of thousands of pounds. the 100v line system is about 900

thanks for your help


ben
 
ImcLoud

ImcLoud

Audioholic Ninja
Find a good bookshelf speaker and some decent priced amps, NO Receiver needed just Ipod at reception on a dock with a volume control.. Easy...

My friend owns a gym and he has Boston acoustic bookshelves, wired to a few pa system amplifiers.. It does the job.. and I want to say he spent $500 all together, 3 floor warehouse, and he can blast you out of it with that cheap system..
 
H

herosgym

Enthusiast
i am in the uk.

so 1 amp will run the 6 speakers?

im sorry but i really am a beginner understanding how it works.

ben
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
I would go with a multi-channel amplifier.

A 12 channel amplifier from any of the major manufactures - Niles, Speakercraft, or Sonance. Check eBay.

Each of these amps can power up to 24 speakers.

Each of these amps have individual gain (volume) control for each of the 12 channels of output. The volume controls are typically on the back of the units, but are usually easy enough to get to and adjust. If you end up not happy with that operation, you can add a separate volume control(s) before or after the amplifier.

You can go direct into the amp from a PC or iPod if it has internal volume control. A PC does and a iPod does - a stand alone CD player does not, but you can use the CD drive inside a PC/laptop for CD playback just fine.

Something like this is ideal:
SpeakerCraft BB1235 12 Channel Big Bang Power Amplifier 1940 | eBay

Another option is to put multiple volume controls throughout the space in different areas and allow people to adjust the volume locally for each pair of speakers in their space so that they can choose a bit more volume level if they would like it.

I actually did a fitness center recently and this is pretty much how it was setup...

Several sources were available through a mixer which also allowed for the receptionist to use the microphone to speak through the speakers. Three or four different sources were available to the system. Two separate stand alone systems were on a cart for their workout rooms which were separately enclosed rooms.

They also had local TV feeds with headphone connections to a bunch of stand alone workout pieces of equipment with dedicated TV tuners for all of them. A couple dozen maybe.

Obviously, this WAS tens of thousands of dollars to setup, but was part of a hundred milliion dollar plus building.

You really do want to have more speakers if possible though so that you can have even audio coverage throughout the space.

Unfortunately in the UK, you don't seem to have the same number of audio options via eBay, which may throw things off a bit on price to your location.
 
H

herosgym

Enthusiast
Thankyou for your reply. im starting to understand it a little more now.

i think the volume control would be better and easyer for the staff to get to at reception. maybe also just have a seperate volume control upstairs for the two speakers up there.

i really do appreciate your help, would you be able to list me a complete setup from controls to speakers? its just so i can see what you recomend and i know it will work, also knowing where to get them from.

regards,

ben
 
H

herosgym

Enthusiast
would this amp do what im after? it seems the same as the other one you sent bmx?? ill post link in next post as ive only made 4 posts
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
That looks good, except you need a volume control for each PAIR of speakers that you need to control. If you have 4 speakers upstairs, that is 2 stereo zones, so 2 volume controls. It will help you be able to balance audio across the upstairs area more easily.

Also kind of weird to have speakers rated at 4 ohms instead of 8 ohms. The Denon amp will handle that just fine, but it is unusual. If you need to put a second pair of speakers on the same channel of the amplifier, watch how you wire it!
 
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