ProSoundWeb Community

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  

Pages: [1] 2  All   Go Down

Author Topic: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub  (Read 6771 times)

Ross Davey

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 10
Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« on: May 05, 2019, 10:45:18 AM »

Hi all,

I have some new RCF 8004-AS Subs that I'm looking to gain stage.

I use a DBX PA2 processor for my system.

The method I follow from the PA2 instructions on youtube is the following (please advise if this is wrong or there is a better method!) -

If you would rather watch the video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSv6nxw2T9M

  • Disconnect the amp from the speaker (Active speakers so I cant do this)
  • Turn down the attenuator on the amps and play pink noise through the mixer
  • Set the fader of the pink noise channel to Unity Gain
  • Raise the master fader of the mixer until the input signal level is just under the clip point of the Driverack (0) on the drive rack.
  • If you can achieve that with the master fader, raise the pink noise channel fader till you are at this point
  • If you still cant reach this point raise the gain/trim pot of the channel till you are just under 0
  • Turn up the attenuator on the amp until its just under clipping (at this point the subs will be making a lot of noise)
  • Mark where the attenuator dial is set, you do not want to exceed this when running the system
  • Increase the attenuator of the amp till it just starts to clip
  • Open the drive rack limiter control for that channel and adjust the limiter threshold till the clip LED of the amp just about turn off.
  • Set the amp attenuator back to the mark you made earlier and turn off the pink noise
  • Turn down the master fader of the mixer and play a music CD through the mixer and adjust it to unity gain
  • Turn on your amplifiers and slowly raise the master fader till you reach 0vu on the mixers meter or -12 for digital
  • Turn up the amplifiers attenuator till you reach the desired level but do not exceed the mark you made earlier


Because the Subs are active I have no way of disconnecting the speaker from the amp without opening them up and I don't want to do that.

Is there any downside or damage I can cause to the speakers by running pink noise through them till the point the limit light comes on on the sub amp so I can get the right gain staging and set the limiters as per the instructions above. Is there a way I can accuratly calculate the limiter settings without having to pink noise the crap out of them and purposely clip the system?

Noise isn't a problem as I'm going to be doing this in a studio practice room for the evening which is sound proofed so annoying neighbours isn't an issue. Im more concerned about the health of my new speakers.

Ive seen many articles on here about gain staging but never know which one is right as everyone has their way of doing it or opinions.

The way I understand from the drive rack instructions is that my system should be clipping when my meters are almost at clip on the mixer. That way I know from the mixer when I'm near the limit of my system without having to keep checking on the amplifiers during a show?

Looking for advice here. I have the studio time on Wednesday 8th so if anyone has advise I can use before then to get this setup properly that would be apreciated.
Logged

Roland Clarke

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 841
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #1 on: May 05, 2019, 05:44:33 PM »

This is all very well, but what you need to do is balance your sub output proportionate to your tops.  In different situations this will likely be different, eg inside you are going to get resonances and room gain, not so likely outside.  It may we’ll be that your subs can’t keep up with your tops, then your only choice will be to buy more or run the whole rig quieter or compromise on bass output.  Simply running pink through your desk and trying to see at what point you hit the limit light doesn’t tell you very much in real world music situations.  I would start the rig low and listen too some tracks you know and increase incrementally and keep checking your cabinet gain trims and input level.  If you hear anything untoward I would back off.  If you decide to run pink through your system, I would only run it at lowish levels, enough to get a good coherence reading on SMAART assuming you are using a measurement system of some kind.
Logged

Tim McCulloch

  • SR Forums
  • Hero Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 23783
  • Wichita, Kansas USA
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #2 on: May 05, 2019, 08:22:32 PM »

If your rig is exclusively based on powered loudspeakers I'd submit this is likely a fools errand.

The purpose of gain staging back in Yee Olde Analogue Dayz was to minimize the noise floor by getting all the devices ahead of the power amp to clip at the same point, and then adjust the amplifier input level until the amp output was clipping.  The result was the lowest possible noise floor and the knowledge that seeing a red light anywhere meant red lights everywhere.

Modern mixers, processors and powered speakers do not have the noise floor limitations of stuff made 30, 40, 50 years ago.  That's not to say gain staging is irrelevant (it is, but mostly for other reasons), but that it's far less of an issue than it was in the previous century.
Logged
"If you're passing on your way, from Palm Springs to L.A., Give a wave to good ol' Dave, Say hello to progress and goodbye to the Moonlight Motor Inn." - Steve Spurgin, Moonlight Motor Inn

Ivan Beaver

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 9538
  • Atlanta GA
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #3 on: May 05, 2019, 08:44:06 PM »

If your rig is exclusively based on powered loudspeakers I'd submit this is likely a fools errand.

The purpose of gain staging back in Yee Olde Analogue Dayz was to minimize the noise floor by getting all the devices ahead of the power amp to clip at the same point, and then adjust the amplifier input level until the amp output was clipping.  The result was the lowest possible noise floor and the knowledge that seeing a red light anywhere meant red lights everywhere.

Modern mixers, processors and powered speakers do not have the noise floor limitations of stuff made 30, 40, 50 years ago.  That's not to say gain staging is irrelevant (it is, but mostly for other reasons), but that it's far less of an issue than it was in the previous century.

Very True.

I remember my first PA digital delay.

It only had choices in 5ms increments.  This was back in the 80s

It was VERY noisy.

I had to drive the input right up to clip, and then turn own my amps downstream because of the noise.

Things have come a long way over the years
Logged
A complex question is easily answered by a simple-easy to understand WRONG answer!

Ivan Beaver
Danley Sound Labs

PHYSICS- NOT FADS!

Paul G. OBrien

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 1401
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #4 on: May 05, 2019, 10:12:30 PM »


I have some new RCF 8004-AS Subs that I'm looking to gain stage.

I use a DBX PA2 processor for my system.

Ross what are you mains? If they are also powered then your DRPA just became redendant... it will not add any protection except perhaps in certain extreme conditions like dry rentals to EDM DJs where you would set a limiter at well below the subs maximum output.

Logged

Luke Geis

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 2359
    • Owner of Endever Music Production's
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #5 on: May 05, 2019, 10:20:23 PM »

I concur with Ivan and Tim, that in the modern era, gain staging is less of a need; especially with powered units.

Some modern powered units have a noise gate built into them as well for the purpose of noise floor reduction.

I would go on to say that dependant upon what you have going on with your mains and the type of mixer you have, the dbx PA2 is possibly an unneeded tool. I am nowadays all about removing as much from the signal chain as possible. If you have a digital amp, why use another digital tool that does the same things the amplifier does? If you have a digital mixer that has most if not all of the digital processing you need built-in, why use another device? The less stuff that is in the signal path, the fewer chances for failure and other anomalies to happen. Less is more. Not knowing exactly what you have going on though, I couldn't say for sure what to do.

The short answer is to turn the subs up until the system sounds the way you would like it to. Without a SMAART rig, anything you do is pretty much guessing anyway. The subs have a delay built into them as well as other features designed to make it less dependent upon other digital tools.
Logged
I don't understand how you can't hear yourself

Ross Davey

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 10
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #6 on: May 06, 2019, 04:27:24 AM »

Hi all

Thanks for the comments so far.

The main purpose of this exercise for me isn't about removing the noise floor as you all mention. I agree with your points on the noise floor in modern equipment.

I also use the DRPA as my crossover rather than the one built into the subs.

The poster above mentioned that I would ned to balance the subs with the tops (don't disagree) but I set the system so everything clips at the same time when I'm near clip on my mixer. I know that will off balance the subs and probably make them too loud above the tops. I balance everything then from the mixer. If I need less sub I just send less Kick and less bass guitar to the system by turning the fader down, or if I don't want to compromise on the high frequencies going to the tops by turning the fader down I will EQ out some of the bass instead to keep the balance.

The purpose of the exercise for me (and tell me if I'm doing this ass backwards) is to know when my system is near its max. So if I gain stage my equipment I know that when I'm near clip on my mixer I'm near clip on the PA2 and and also the speakers attached to it and know that I cant get any more out of the system and also know that I'm not running it into clip the whole gig from FOH.

If I were to follow the advise of some other posts where by the posters run their mixer at around -12 for digital then just turn the system up till it gives them the level they want, how do I know if I go above -12 that I'm not then running the system into clip without going back and forth to the speakers during the gig to check the clip lights aren't flashing away?

I swap between mains depending on the venue I'm working. I either use HK L5 112 Passive tops with a QSC GX7 amp, 1 per side or I also have two per side RCF HDL6-A (speaker on poles above sub jobs) or centre cluster the subs and put the mains on poles L&R.

The system is only ever used by me and isn't dry hired.
« Last Edit: May 06, 2019, 04:31:49 AM by Ross Davey »
Logged

Chris Grimshaw

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 1826
  • Sheffield, UK
    • Grimshaw Audio
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #7 on: May 06, 2019, 11:28:57 AM »

The poster above mentioned that I would ned to balance the subs with the tops (don't disagree) but I set the system so everything clips at the same time when I'm near clip on my mixer. I know that will off balance the subs and probably make them too loud above the tops. I balance everything then from the mixer. If I need less sub I just send less Kick and less bass guitar to the system by turning the fader down, or if I don't want to compromise on the high frequencies going to the tops by turning the fader down I will EQ out some of the bass instead to keep the balance.

The purpose of the exercise for me (and tell me if I'm doing this ass backwards) is to know when my system is near its max. So if I gain stage my equipment I know that when I'm near clip on my mixer I'm near clip on the PA2 and and also the speakers attached to it and know that I cant get any more out of the system and also know that I'm not running it into clip the whole gig from FOH.

With regards to the first paragraph, pushing channel faders is not the same as balancing the PA system. If you run the subs high and the bass GTR low, you'll have lots of 100Hz and down from the bass GTR, but no midrange definition at all.

Secondly, all you need to do to achieve what you want is connect the desk to the cabinets, run pink noise while tickling the red lights at the mixer, and then set the gain controls at the speakers so that they, too, are just about flashing red.

That way, the red line on your mixer is the same as the red line on your speakers.

Chris
Logged
Sheffield-based sound engineering.
www.grimshawaudio.com

Ross Davey

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 10
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #8 on: May 06, 2019, 11:40:26 AM »

Secondly, all you need to do to achieve what you want is connect the desk to the cabinets, run pink noise while tickling the red lights at the mixer, and then set the gain controls at the speakers so that they, too, are just about flashing red.

That way, the red line on your mixer is the same as the red line on your speakers.

Chris

Thanks - thats basically the point I'm getting at in my first post. Am I wrong to get it up this way so that I'm using clip on my mixer to show me when the rest of the system is clipping? That way I know from the desk how much system I have left to play with for that gig. Other posters just seem to run the desk around 0 or -12 for digital and then turn the system up at the amps/active speaker till its where they want it. But in that scenario how do they know what their headroom is? How do they know that if they need to go a bit louder above -12 that they aren't then putting the speakers into clip?

Also one of the other points I mentioned doesn't seem to have been addressed. Do I risk damaging my subs by running pink noise through them and turning them up till they clip so I can work out where the clip point is? Is there any risk to doing this? (a crossover point will have been set in my DRPA first before doing this first)

Thanks
Logged

Riley Casey

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 2081
  • Wash DC
Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #9 on: May 06, 2019, 02:34:16 PM »

If your active subs don't have optimal crossover and limiting characteristics designed into the box by the manufacturer there probably wasn't any benefit to choosing active versus passive subs to begin with.

...
Also one of the other points I mentioned doesn't seem to have been addressed. Do I risk damaging my subs by running pink noise through them and turning them up till they clip so I can work out where the clip point is? Is there any risk to doing this? (a crossover point will have been set in my DRPA first before doing this first)

Thanks

ProSoundWeb Community

Re: Pink Noise - Gain staging an active sub
« Reply #9 on: May 06, 2019, 02:34:16 PM »


Pages: [1] 2  All   Go Up
 



Site Hosted By Ashdown Technologies, Inc.

Page created in 0.021 seconds with 21 queries.