My first post, hope its in the right place..
Some time ago i bought a sound system to go in my pub, i explained to the sales guy from a well known and well established audio shop exactly what i needed, took the advice bought the kit and its never worked, i'm hopeing you guys may be able to shed some light or point me in the right direction to getting it sorted.
To give you an idea of the layout, the pub has 4 rooms and i needed all speakers set up to one cd player & amp, i connected all the kit as instructed but i get virtually no sound from the second, third & forth speaker sets.
The equipment i am using is:
Pioneer PD M426 CD Player
NAD C320BEE Amp
QED SS50 Transmatch 5 way speaker switch
I am only using connection on the switch A,B,C,D
The speakers connected to A are Jamo cornet 30 6 OHM (very loud)
The speakers connected to B,C,D are Jamo Compact 700 8 OHM (Virtually no sound)
I have tried replaceing the speakers on A to a spare pair of Jamo Compact 700 8 OHM but this makes the situation worse, as the volume becomes even louder on this connection and still doesnt improve the volume on the other 3 sets.
Its a total nighmare and i have no idea how to sort it, i have been told i need an impedence management system? and also it may be due to the fact the speaker cable is different in length running from the amp to the various rooms? I havnt got a clue, hope someone can help?
Regards
420uk
You should have used an outfit that specializes on commercial installations. Whoever sold you that equipment does not have the first clue about commercial installations.
Your main problem is the QED switch which is designed to work the way it does. It provides good performance in one room and only low background in all the others, which is what you have found out.
The next problem is your amp is too small.
You have several options.
1). Place impedance matching volume controls in each room. If all rooms are playing it will not be particularly loud on any room. A good deal of your power will be wasted as heat in the controls.
The reason you have to do this is that if you connect all your speakers together the impedance will be so low you will blow your amp instantly.
2). Place transformers at the amp to convert to a professional 70 volt system. You would have to place transformers at each speaker. The watts taps to the speakers would have to add up to 50 watts, as your amp is 50 watts per channel. By using the taps you can set a different level to each room. However once it is set it is set, and can not be changed on the fly.
This system would not waste amp power and distribute the power efficiently throughout the system. The Sound quality will be degraded by the transformers.
3). What you should have had was either a professional PA amp installed in the first place, or better: -
4). A pro eight channel amp giving around 100 watts per channel, with remote digital key pads in each room to control the volume and even change sources remotely.
Unfortunately anyway you sort this out will require a significant investment. The first option would be the cheapest, but I doubt you will be happy with it.
The best option is the last and by far the most expensive.