Title: Spencer Fleeman’s Guide to Using a Sound Board
1Spencer Fleemans Guide to Using a Sound Board
2Sound Vocabulary
- Input- A connection that takes sound from another
items output. - Output- A connection that sends sound from itself
to whatever other devices input its patched to. - Source- An item that is reinforced such as a
persons voice, guitar, keyboard, mini-disc
player, an entire choir - Channel- An independent input on a sound board to
plug in a microphone, CD player, or whatever the
source is. - Phantom power- certain fancy microphones need
additional power to operate, therefore they
require a battery or a soundboard that supplies
48 volts down the mic cable, the 48 volts is
known as phantom power. - Unbalanced- When a connection is made with a
cable that has 2 conductors, it is unbalanced.
This is similar to using a 2-prong extension cord
instead of one that has 3-prongs making it
grounded. Unbalanced connections typically do not
sound as good as ones that are balanced. CD
players, keyboards, computers, etc. are usually
un-balanced sources. Cables include RCA and ¼
with 2 conductors (1 line on the connector.
3Sound Vocabulary (2)
- Balanced- The audio connection is made with a
cable that has 3 conductors. These connections
sound better, less risk of having a buzz (like
one that could be heard between a guitar and a
guitar amp). XLR cables are always balanced, ¼
cables are balanced if they have 3 conductors (2
lines on the connector). - Group- A grouping of channels that are grouped
together by picking on each channel with group it
should go to. - Direct Box- If a guitar, laptop, VCR, keyboard,
or any other device that is un-balanced/ has no
xlr connection. A direct box is used to change
the ¼ unbalanced connection to a balanced xlr
connection that can be sent all the way up a long
mic cable to the sound board. - Insert- A connection found on each channel or
group that has a purpose of inserting a device
onto the channel or group such as an equalizer,
effect box, or an audio limiter. When a device
is patched to the insert connection, the channel
or group it is plugged into will be changed by
that device.
4Sound Vocabulary (3)
- Equalizer- A device that has an input and an
output, it takes the sound that is sent to its
input and changes the frequency tones of the
source. Ex The whole body mic group sounds like
it has too much bass, the lower part of the
equalizer can be turned down to loose some bass
on everyones body mic on that group. The
equalizer can be patched to any channel or groups
insert connection with an insert cable. - Audio Compressor/limiter- Although un-necessary
for basic sound reproduction, sometimes it helps
to have one patched to a channel or group. It
takes a source and automatically turns it down
when its too loud or uses its gate function to
automatically mute the source when its too quite.
Ex Theres an actor that has random lines where
he/she is supposed to shout, the compressor would
turn down their volume automatically when they
get loud. - Trim- the first knob on a channel that is used to
adjust the initial volume of a source. Ex A
trumpet may need its trim down low to avoid
distortion, a whispering actor on a backstage
microphone may need its trim up high to boost
his/her voice.
5Sound Vocabulary (4)
- Distortion- This occurs when a source is
overloading a channel, a source overloads a
device, or an amp is overloaded by the loudness
sent to it. It makes the sound seem poor and
rough. To correct distortion, do things like
turning down trims on channels that have
distortion or if it is a device, turn down the
volume of what is being sent to it and turn up
the devices output instead. Distortion is
commonly heard in rock music when a electric
guitar doesnt sound all clean and pretty but
more rock like. - Feedback- A woooooooooaaaaaaa, quoooooolllllllllla
aaaaaaa or a seeeeeeeee noise that instantly
makes everyone look at you with dissatisfaction
because their ear drums are bleeding in pain.
This happens when a mic going through a speaker
can hear itself from the speaker and it cycles
around and around. When adjusting a trim to set
how loud the mic can get, turn the trim up until
right before the feedback starts. Common day
example of feedback would be Youre on the phone
and you turn on a speaker phone while the other
is still on and you hear the noise- That is
Feedback! Not just some random noise, it has a
reason, it happens when we screw up how loud we
turn something up.
6Sound Vocabulary (5)
- Analog- Sound that is natural, not digitized.
Ex Microphone, Cassette tape, VCR, old
cell-phones, amplifiers. - Digital- Sound that is digitized to record it or
modify it more easily. The analog sound is
changed to computer language but is later changed
back to analog to listen to it. Ex CD Player,
Mini-disc, Computers, Digital Equalizer, new
cell-phones, or a keyboard before the sound makes
it to the speakers. - Sub Woofer- A speaker that only produces bass
frequencies that is intended to be used with
other speakers to produce the middle and high
frequencies. - Speaker- A device that is patched to an amplifier
that makes the sound the audience hears. - Crossover- A device in the amp rack that
shouldnt be touched normally, it divides which
sound should go to the subwoofers and which sound
should be sent to the speakers. - Amplifier- Normal sound connections only contain
enough power to make sound through headphones.
In order to power speakers, an amplifier must be
patched to the line and the speakers are
connected to the amplifier.
7Sound Vocabulary (6)
- Hotspot- A small speaker that is used in
situations where a few people need to hear a
device(s) It still must be connected to an
amplified line. Ex Stage managers, Choral
director, piano player, keyboardist, or actors
backstage. - Pan- Knobs on the sound board that choose whether
a source belongs on the left or right side of a
stereo mix/ whether the source goes to an even
group or an odd group. - Stereo- Sound that is divided into two separate
channels. Ex The left speaker in an auditorium
as to the right speaker. Ex 2 You are listening
to a band on an ipod and you notice one singer is
heard in your left ear and the other is in your
right ear as well as hearing a lead guitar on the
left and the keyboard on the right. This is a
stereo mix. - Mono- No division of channels is necessary,
everything is pooled together. Ex Podium mic
going through all speakers equally. Ex 2 A
recording from before the 1960s when stereo
sound started.
8CablesYou couldnt use anything without them
Female
Male
- XLR to XLR- The cable that is used most, a
balanced connection that locks securely. Ex
Microphones, Mixer connections, Amplifiers,
Processing Devices, Jacks around the room. - ¼ to ¼ Balanced (TRS)- A patch cable that is
balanced, it has 3 conductors (2 lines) just like
an xlr but does not lock. Ex Board to board
connections/ processing devices - 1/4 to ¼ Un-balanced (TS)- A cable that does
not lock but only has 2 conductors (1 line).
This cable will be likely to buzz because it is
not balanced.
Notice the ¼ unbalanced has one line on the tip.
Notice the ¼ balanced has two lines on the tip.
9Cables (2)
¼
- RCA to ¼- CD Players, VCRs, Mini-disc, DVD
players use RCA connectors to send and receive
sound, the sound board does not have RCA
connectors. Use the RCA to ¼ cable to connect
devices like these to the sound board or a direct
box, they are unbalanced cables. - RCA to XLR- Same thing as RCA to ¼ except has a
XLR connector for when ¼ is not available. - ¼ to XLR- A cable that takes a ¼ connector and
connects it to an xlr connector. These would be
used commonly with connecting the mixer to
processors or amplifiers that only have XLR
connections. - ¼ to ¼ unbalanced thick gauge- This is an
unbalanced ¼ to ¼ except the wires are thicker
to carry high voltage audio which speakers have.
These are used to connect speakers to amps or
speakers to jacks that lead to an amp.
RCA
¼ to XLR
RCA to XLR
10Cables (3)
- ¼ to speakon- A speaker cable that is for
speakers that do not have ¼ connectors but
instead have a locking speakon connector. Some
speakers in the auditorium have speakon while
others have ¼ - ¼ to banana- Some amplifiers do not have ¼ or
speakon connectors but instead have a red and a
black post like connector, these are called
banana plugs, use the cable to change banana to
the ¼ connector found on the speaker. - ¼ balanced (TRS) to two ¼ unbalanced (TS)
connectors. This is known as an insert cable, the
TRS end plugs into an insert connector on a
channel or group and changes it to two TS
connectors for send and receive to make the
insertion. Another use would be to take a stereo
output on a device and change it to two mono
connections (one for left, one for right). EX To
connect a keyboards stereo output to one direct
box for left and another for right. EX 2 To
connect an equalizer to group 3 or channel 10 on
a sound board.
11Cables (4)
- 1/8 balanced (TRS) to two ¼ unbalanced (TS)
connectors- Same thing as the ¼ insert cable
except with an 1/8 connector that is smaller.
This would be used to patch a portable device
such as an Ipod or computer to the sound board. - XLR to TA3 (Tiny audio 3)- This is used to
connect floor microphones to xlr connections in
the wall, snake, or sound board. - MIDI- These 5 or 6 pin cables are used to connect
keyboards to keyboard equipment or computers to
use software with the keyboard. They are used
rarely for ordinary sound. - Coax- A cable that is usually used for cable TV
connections but is also used for connection
antennas to body mic equipment.
12Channels
- Each device needs to be patched to a channel,
either XLR or ¼ balanced/ unbalanced, choose ¼
or XLR with the switch on the channel labeled
line/mic - The Avlex board has 32 mono XLR/1/4 channels and
4 stereo channels that have a left ¼ and a right
¼ input. - Use stereo channels for CD player, Mini-disc,
computer, etc. - Mono channels are best used with microphones or 2
separate channels for a stereo source. - Each channel has trim for a pre-volume, an
equalizer, auxiliary sends, mix B, a volume
fader, and assignment switches with a pan knob to
fade L to R / 1 to 2 - Also, each is equipped with a green low-cut
switch, push it in unless the channel has a
piano, bass, or other sources that produce low
frequencies.
Mono Stereo
13Channels (2)
- Each channel with exception to the stereo ones
has 5 connections. - First is an XLR, use it for all microphone
connections and devices with xlr outputs. If the
device requires phantom power (see defined
terms), push down the phantom switch next to the
xlr input. - Next is a ¼ unbalanced or balanced, use it for
cd players, board patches, devices with ¼ - Insert connection is used to patch a device to
modify a channel (EQ box, effect box, compressor) - Direct out is used if you need to send the sound
of only one channel to an additional item such as
another sound board. - Tape input is never used in our situation but it
is an alternate input.
XLR
Insert
1/4
Direct Out
14Channels (3)An example
- Channels 1-10 may have body microphones
- Channels 11-16 may have stage microphones
- Channels 17-20 may have handheld microphones
- Channel 21- piano low, 22- piano high, 23- bass,
24- guitar, 25- drums, 26- violins - Channels 27-32 should be used for the matrix
controls.
15Trim -also known as gain, headroom, clip, or as I
call it pre-volume
- Trim- also known as gain, headroom, clip, or as I
call it pre-volume - Next to the trim knob, there is a green light and
a red light, if the channels singer or whatever
is singing and the green light is blinking, the
trim is at a good level, if the red light is
blinking, the trim is too loud and is distorting
the sound on the channel, so turn it down! - A good way to set the trim on a live microphones
channel is to bring the fader up all the way and
turn the trim up until the microphone starts a
feedback noise over the sound system, then bring
the trim back to where the feedback goes away,
but dont turn the trim up so far that the red
light blinks with the singers voice.
Bad
Good
16Equalizer settings
- Each channel on a sound board has EQ settings.
- The Avlex board has 6 knobs per channel for EQ
- The high and low knobs are similar to a stereos
bass and treble knobs. - The high mid knob controls what the top part of
the mid spectrums frequencies sound like and the
low mid knob controls the bottom part of the mid
spectrums frequencies. - The high and low mid knobs also have an
additional knob ganged to them that choose which
low or high mid frequency is changed - Leaving all EQ knobs in the middle takes no
frequency away while also not adding any
therefore, leave them all in the middle unless
the item on the channel sounds like it needs a
change.
High volume
High mid frequency choice
High mid volume
Low mid
frequency choice
Low mid volume
Low volume
17Auxiliaries
- Auxiliaries are used to send a channels source
to an extra place besides the main speakers. - Includes Dressing rooms, VCRs, sound effects
speakers, orchestra pit monitors. - On the Avlex board 1-4 always send sound even if
channel is muted, 5-6 are joined with 7-8 - Best way to use them is to send an entire group
from the matrix to an auxiliary- Ex send group
one body microphones to auxiliary 1, 2, and 4 for
all monitors
Sends 5 and 6 to 7 and 8
18Solo- also known as pre-fader listen, cue,
headphones
- So the show is going and you notice the trombone
on channel 11 sounds like it needs to have its EQ
changed and you cant turn everything off to
listen to it. - You can press its channels solo button and in
the headphones connected to the sound board, only
the trombone is heard so you can adjust the EQ
without hearing anything else in the headphones - The rest of the sound system remains to sound the
exact same with or without solo buttons selected
Solo button
19Groups
Send Aux returns to a group
Pan knob
Choose group on channel
- Groups are used to organize channels
- Each channel has 1/2, 3/4, 5/6, 7/8, and L/R
- Go from 1 to 2, L to R etc. by turning the pan
knob from the left to the right. (example, in the
middle, both in left and right) - Auxiliary returns can also be sent to groups by
pressing their assignment switch.
Groups
20Groups (2)
- Each group has 3 outputs, on the board they are
labeled outputs 1-24, 1-8 would go to groups 1-8.
9-16 go to groups 1-8 again 9 to 1, 10 to 2, 11
to 3 etc. 17-24 go to 1-8 as well, 17 to 1, 18
to 2, etc. - A ¼ balanced cable would be used to patch a
group output to the matrix, amplifier, recorder,
or whatever other sound device.
1
2
3
These are the outputs..
1
2
3
1
2
3
Inserts are these jacks through here
As well as outputs, each group has an insert in
which just like a channel, you can insert a
device onto a whole group as to individual
channels. (Ex a reverb box on group 1 for all
mens body mics.
21Groups (3)
- Groups 1 through 6 need one of their 3 outputs to
be patched directly to the matrix, group 7 is
patched to the front ceiling amp in the amp rack
and group 8 goes to the amp for the balcony
ceiling speakers. - If a multi-input recorder is used to record a
musical and needs each groups sound, patch to
the extra outputs on each group. - The inserts on each group should be patched to
the equalizers and compressors, chances are they
should be set neutral so that they do not do
anything but Defeo will be happy to see the
1,000 equalizers in use.
22Masters
- Like groups 1-8, channels and auxiliary returns
can also be patched to L/R (Mix), on this
theatres setup, the stack speakers are patched
to the L-Mix-R - The blue mono fader is the Left and Right mix
faders combined making it mono, the mono fader is
not used in our set up.
The left, right, and mono can also have a device
inserted on them.
The actual outputs are XLR
23Auxiliary Returns
- An auxiliary return is like a channel without EQ,
auxiliary sends, and pre-volume/trim - Use them to plug in the return from an effect
device, the mix B ceiling assignment, or other
devices where only basic control is needed. - The Avlex sound board has 6 of them and return 1
is used for the ceiling mix (assigned to group
7/8 for front and balcony)
24The Matrix!AKA- Spencers Creation
Pre-volume leave at 10 o-clock
Equalizer for group
- The channels 27-32 on the board are used as a
Matrix system. - They are used to pick where groups 1-6 go.
- They can be sent to Auxiliaries 1-8, group LR
for stacks, and Mix B for ceiling
Auxiliaries
Front/Balcony Ceiling
Left/Right
Stacks
Left/right selected
25How The Ceiling Send Works(Using Mix-B)
Each channels mix B knob
- On the matrix channels, there is a volume knob
labeled Mix-B - The Mix-B knob has its own pan knob, fades source
from front to balcony. - Mix Bs output is connected to Auxiliary 1 return
which is assigned to groups 7 and 8 which output
to the ceiling amplifier. - To mute Mix B, use the source switch within the
Mix Bs area, in for on and out for off, use it
to take a group in or out of the ceiling.
Master Mix B
26Kinds of Microphones
- To mic a vocalist, presenter, or even drums,
horns, and guitars- use a sm-58. The theatre
currently has about 7 to use - To mic critical items such as a group of singers,
violins, piano, or a flute, or as an extra
hanging mic use a cm-700, theatre has 8 - If STUCO or someone risky needs a microphone, use
the RE-10, it is like a brick and sounds
terrible.
27Kinds of Microphones (2)
- To mic a vocalist for a recording, mic an entire
choir, or even instruments a large diaphragm
studio mic is a good choice, currently have 4 - If a person needs a mic to sing or speak into but
does not want a cord, use a wireless sm-58 (have
5) or the Mipro Wireless (have 1) - A great mic for area use with plays, use the 2
(hopefully more) shotgun mics - Across the stage and in the little theatre there
are hanging mics to amplify play
28Body Microphones
- Different than a microphone that is held in the
hand, body microphones are when a small mic is
taped to ones head and are discreetly wired to
a transmitter that is belted around the person. - The voice goes through the mic, then to the
transmitter pack, through the air, to the
assigned receiver - Patch the receiver to an empty channel on the
soundboard with an xlr cable - Occasionally when the actor shouts a lot or has a
loud voice, it is necessary to turn down the gain
knob inside the pack, youll know when this
occurs if the mic sounds distorted even with a
low level on the board.
29Body Microphones (2)
- The newer body mics can be programmed to any of
the new receivers, simply hold the pack up to the
receiver, press the ACT button and the pack is
then connected to the receiver. - The old Shure body mics that hopefully will be
gone soon have more problems with going out of
range, make sure the packs antenna is sticking
out of the actors costume. - The antennas for the rack of Shure body mic
receivers can be placed anywhere, you just run
coax cable to them, in the booth sit the antennas
in the window sill but when in the house, tape
the antennas to the balcony railing.