Vari-Lite VL10 BeamWash SoundLightUp preview and video.

Vari-Lite is back in the saddle again, indeed. Their new hybrid moving head, the VL10 Beam-Wash, includes the new Philips 25R Platinum, 550 W of sheer power. Apart from an impressive 2.2 to 48° zoom, this U.S. hot rod can rely on its 16 gobos, 5 animations pattern of the exclusive sur l’exclusif disque VL*FX Animation Wheel, its 2 prisms, its Frost filters and its combination of CMY color mixing + color wheel to run ahead of the pack.

SoundLightUp camera was there on the first European presentation during last JTSE show in Paris to interview Cyril Prat, Technical Manager of Freevox, the Vari-Lite french distributor.

Muscle Beam

Picture it: the Vari-Lite warehouse, 2 Choppers driving in with sputtering motor backfire from hell. The two drivers step out, open the back door and step inside the premises to unwrap some VL moving heads sleeping on the shelves. Getting out of one of the just parked HotRods, a heavily tattoed guy points to a VL3500. An incredible customisation ballet begins, to mutate the Last Great US Flagship of Moving Light into a monster BeamWash fixture. Days have flown, tests duly undergone, here’s the result.

Well seated on its 2 hanging rails, the new Vari-Lite creation boldly takes pride wit hfreshly sticked original logos. The VL10 is wisely (and relatively) high enough for a Texas lighting jewel. 33 kg and 70 xcm of steel and black polycarbonate give precedence to the perfect eye of the 180 mm, an agressive grille firmly tightened by the large base and the head equipped with two extra handles on the top sides

At the heart of the mechanical part waits an extreme light source, a 550 W Philips 25R delivering 28,000 lumens, 640,000 lux @ 10 meters!
The resulting beam flux confirms the synthesis spirit of the Americans flux, an ideal balance between raw power, traditions respect and effects modernity.

The 7,000K color temperature and the CRI of 80 fate the VL10 to stage lighting, rather modern concert or show. The CMY color mixing follows the path, it sticks to the up-to-date standards, quite saturated, with deep tints and precise pastel hues. 10 fixed colors wisely come in addition on a dedicated.

The optics evoke the good old days of Vari-Lite. The very wide 20:1 ratio of the zoom goes from 2.2° to 44°! The focus can me made in every zoom position, allowing the user to play endlessly with the incredible collection of gobos and effects provided by the VL10.
On the first wheel, one finds 8 efficient and fixed gobos, and 4 beam reducers to reach down to 0.7°. The second wheel is equipped with 8 rotating gobos, more dedicated to aerial shapes and volumes.

The third wheel is the main Vari-Lite here. Named LV*FX, this provides 5 large animation patterns on one gear, for effects of dressing, deformation, aerial or multicolored beams.

The customisation goes on with a double superimposed prism, 8-facet circular or 4-facet linear and 2 Frost filters.The first one is a Soft Edge to soften the edge, the second one is a Heavy Frost, allowing the use of the VL10 as a Wash fixture with an angle of 48°.
Almost each of the effects is controlled thru 3 DMX channels, multiplying even more the combinations and possibilities. Apart from indexing, rotation and speed, another channel drives different modes: mega stepping, twist, shake or scrolling. A 2-glass blades dimmer and a shutter conclude the DMX chart, in DMX – RDM or ArtNet.

Please take note that the Vari-Lite VLZ and VL2600 are still available simultaneously. Please remind that each range hosts Led fixture in Profile, Spot or Wash model. The VLZ fixtures provide a power and a number of options aimed at big stages, while the VL2600 models are lighter and more compact and can be defined as Vari-Lite’s Swiss Army Knifes.

More info on the Vari-Lite website.

 

New Adamson CS-Series of Intelligent, Milan-Ready Loudspeakers & New IS-Series

Adamson Systems Engineering will introduce its brand new CS7p point source enclosure – the first entry in a new generation of loudspeaker technology – to the European market at Integrated Systems Europe 2019 (Booth 7-C235).
Beginning with the CS7p, the new CS-Series will be the world’s first family of mobile loudspeakers to feature onboard Class-D amplification, DSP, and Milan-ready (AVB) network endpoints.

Adamson really kicked into gear last year with new assembly lines and reinforcement of its R&D department. there we again in 2019 with 3 newbies unveiled in Amsterdam tomorrow, even though one of them was first presentad at NAMM a fews weeks ago.
All three of them are derived from the S Series in two-way, the flagship of the Port Perry based company and the reason why the SpekTrix and the Metrix ended their glorious career.

New star of the Canadian manufacturer (Stand 7-C235) and new to this new edition of ISE 2019, the CS7p is the first point source enclosure with Milan inside, and the flagship of a new range of loudspeakers containing D Class amplifier, processing, and Adamson AVB input.

“We’ve invested heavily in our R&D and manufacturing infrastructure in recent years to bring Brock Adamson’s proven approach to innovation into the digital audio landscape,” comments Marc Bertrand, Adamson CEO.


Marc Bertrand

“The CS-Series represents our amplified focus on technological convergence and enhanced ease of use, as exemplified by our work with the AVnu Alliance on the Milan protocol. Meanwhile, the latest additions to the IS-Series set the stage for a number of new product introductions throughout 2019 and beyond.”

The CS-Series builds atop the proven foundation of Adamson’s tour-grade S-Series and install-focused IS-Series. In its first iteration, the CS7p has been successfully used as a FOH near-field monitor at high-profile events such as the Hillsong Conference (Australia) and on the Drake and Migos North American tour.

The CS7p employs Milan-ready redundant AVB technology with the ability to daisy-chain networked audio between multiple sources in addition to an analog XLR input and output. Acoustically, the CS7p contains two 7-in. Kevlar Neodymium transducers and a 3-in. compression driver, loaded with a rotatable 70 x 40 (H x V) waveguide. The dipole arrangement of the cabinet provides a stable polar response, and the CS7p can also be paired to increase horizontal coverage and overall output.

Benoit Cabot

“The building blocks in the CS-Series, which we’ll be expanding in the coming months, will simplify complex system deployments by eliminating complications in network infrastructure,” shares Benoit Cabot, Director of R&D at Adamson. “Of course, these advanced features build on the foundation of premium audio and build quality that spans the S-Series and IS-Series.”

The new IS10n is a S10n dedicated to fixed installations. It contains the same ransduces as its Touring siste, i.e. two ND10-LM for lom-mid (2 x 16 ohms) and a NH4TA2 with 1,5” throat (8 ohm impedance).

The S10n in installation version: the IS10n.

The critically-optimized wavefront with a nominal dispersion pattern of 80° x 10° (H x V). The waveguide’s efficiency allows for increased vertical dispersion without sacrificing high-frequency presence in the far field. Patent-pending Controlled Summation Technology further eliminates low-mid lobing normally associated with two-way line source systems.

The IS7px: compact, passive and probably very close to the CS active version.

The IS7px is a passive two-way, full-range point source cabinet containing two ND7-LM16 low-mid drivers and an NH3-8 1.4” exit compression driver with a passive crossover, resulting in a nominal impedance of 6 Ω.
The prolate spheroidal waveguide produces a nominal dispersion pattern of 70° x 40° (H x V), rotatable by 90° increments. The design of the waveguide ensures equal tonal balance when moving outside of the intended coverage pattern, delivering natural sound with no diffraction or lobing.

The cabinet construction for both the IS10n and IS7px uses marine-grade birch plywood as well as aircraft-grade aluminum and steel. They come equipped with two Speakon NL4 connectors (IS10n and IS7px) or barrier strips (IS10nb and IS7pbx).
A plate-and-screw rigging system is recessed in the interior of the rear rigging fins of the IS10n and placed on four faces of the IS7px for deployment in a variety of applications.

These three new offerings are currently shipping, and will be on display alongside some of Adamson’s other heralded loudspeaker products at ISE 2019, Booth 7-C235.

More information on the Adamson Website

 

JOE WHITE BACK IN THE NEXO SALES TEAM

NEXO is pleased to announce the appointment of Joe White to its international sales team. He will be taking up the role of Business Development Manager with responsibility for NEXO’s activities in South-East Asia, India and Oceania. Joe is a familiar face to NEXO customers, having spent four years with the company as Global Marketing Manager.

Since 2011, he has been running his own business in Indonesia, but, in his words, “I really miss the audio industry and all the co-workers and colleagues in NEXO’s international orbit.”

Reporting to Sales Director Denis Baudier, Joe White will shoulder the responsibility for managing NEXO’s distribution network in the far East.

“Over the last 7 years, I have had a ringside seat to watch the cultural and economic evolution in this territory,” says Joe White.

“New government investments into infrastructure and policies are highly encouraging for a sound reinforcement equipment manufacturer of international renown. As the countries in south-east Asia become more tolerant of, and receptive to, multiculture, we can see huge growth potential in the entertainment and worship sectors. This is a very exciting time to rejoin my friends at NEXO and put on a new hat!”

More info on Nexo products.

 

CLF Lighting announces CLF Orion Hybrid

The CLF Orion is a multifunctional and powerful hybrid, and comes with an extensive feature package. During the ISE in Amsterdam, come see this fixture at booth 15-R290.

The CLF Orion is an all-in-one workhorse. It features a wide lens which allows big mid-air effects. The 471W Osram light source provides a very bright and punchy beam, which can be zoomed from 2° to 42°. Colors can be mixed smoothly by using CMY, but a fixed color wheel is also available.

Among the effects are a fixed and rotating gobo wheel, both equipped with autofocus when zooming. Besides that, two prism wheels and an animation wheel are also part of the feature package. Two linear frosts are combinable for maximum flexibility.
Hotspot control enables smooth projection, and a high CRI filter is available for television and theatre use. The fixture is equipped with two turnable quick triggers for quick installation.

More information can be found on dedicated CLF Lighting Website page

And manufacturer demo video below :

 

L-Acoustics Unveils Ultra-compact X4i Coaxial Enclosure at ISE 2019

For the Integrated Systems Europe (ISE) trade show, February 5th-8th, L-Acoustics announces the launch of X4i, smallest ever to be manufactured in Marcoussis.
It is a powerful yet superbly unobtrusive and highly weatherized coaxial loudspeaker for installation applications or all-purpose small performances.

In a convenient enclosure weighing less than a kilo, X4i, the smallest loudspeaker the company has ever manufactured, measures only 3.9 inches/99 mm deep, yet still offers the L-Acoustics world-class sonic signature.</

X4i is designed to complement ARCS or Kiva systems with the same rendering, in a lot of various venues. Perfectly dimensioned for ease of integration into conventional construction materials, X4i is ideally suited to fill applications in performing arts centers or houses of worship, matching the sonic signature of main L-Acoustics systems such as ARCS and Kiva.
X4i can be hidden in walls, stair risers, stage lips, pit rails, under balconies or any other tight spot with ease. The enclosure can additionally provide vocal reinforcement in settings such as conference rooms, museums and exhibits, and hospitality venues.

The perfect low frequencies buddy for the X4i, here is the Syva Low and its 12” woofer derived from 18” inside the KS28.

Combined with Syva Sub, X4i provides an ideal solution for indoor or outdoor background music in restaurants, bars, hotels, and retail locations. Furthermore, the robust, weather-resistant X4i boasts an IP55 rating and becomes watertight with a rear sealing plate, allowing integration in challenging climatic or outdoor environments. Complemented by a versatile mounting accessory, X4i delivers extreme flexibility of use for optimal discretion in a high-performance package, purpose-built to integrate into conventional construction.

You thought 5XT was small, then appreciate the X4i dimensions, as coaxial indeed, but far more discrete.

Jeff Rocha, Director of Product Management at L-Acoustics, concludes:

« In developing X4i, our aim was to provide unsurpassed utility without compromising on sound quality, while catering to known architectural constraints. X4i is quite literally the perfect fit for the integration needs of today’s installation markets. »


X4i ships beginning in March. To discover this new, tiny but powerful loudspeaker and talk to its designers, please visit the L-Acoustics booth 7-X230 in Hall 7 at ISE 2019 from February 5-8.


More info on L-Acoustics Website.

 

High End SolaFrame 3000 on the catwalks of Paris’ Opera Bastille

There is a new addition at The Opéra Bastille for its 30th birthday. The two catwalks in the auditorium, which are loaded with 2 kW profiles to ensure key lighting at that distance, have made some space for three LED moving heads to facilitate alternating productions. At 42 m from the stage, power was essential.
Rui De Matos, Head of Lighting at The Bastille, and Nicolas Da Canal, Head of Maintenance, after a thorough and comparative evaluation chose the High End SolaFrame 3000. Considering the requirements set by opera lighting designers, we can assume that the luminous flux of this fixture is not its only quality.

Rui De Matos (left) and Nicolas Da Canal (right) flanking two of the Bastille’s LED profiles: a Robe DL7S from a previous acquisition, and one of the new arrivals, a High End SolaFrame 3000.

The request for tender stated:“Supply of automated fixtures to be installed in the technical catwalks of the Bastille Opera House, the purpose of which is to provide long-range motorized sources to facilitate change-overs between different productions.”

We asked Rui De Matos and Nicolas Da Canal to give us the details of this investment.

SLU : What was your priority? Power?

Rui De Matos : Nico and I chose this projector together and, at the time of the RFT, we didn’t automatically specify an LED fixture because we needed a very high luminous flux to reach the stage from the auditorium catwalks, a distance of 40 m. At the beginning of the project, we had in mind a discharge lamp. Following Prolight+Sound, and as soon as we had the opportunity to have a demo unit to test it and compare it to other motorized units – both LED and discharge – we were pleasantly surprised.

The throw distance to the stage reaches 42 m. Impressive!

Nicolas Da Canal : Also, we intend to replace our discharge sources, so we were interested in this possibility – which we hadn’t imagined – to be able to use an LED fixture.

SLU : Why do you feel the need to do away with lamps?

Nicolas Da Canal : Because manufacturers are no longer able to manufacture discharge lamps within acceptable color temperature tolerances. Given the volume of production, the manufacturing process has become very approximate.

Rui De Matos : And, even if environmentalism is not necessarily our top priority, we must keep in mind that a discharge lamp usually remains on during the whole show, even if we will only use the fixture for two or three effects per act. This is not the case with LEDs. That also has a significant impact on the maintenance budget.

Catwalk 2 in the auditorium, mainly equipped with 2 kW Robert Juliat 614 S long-throw profiles…

SLU : Rui, do the moving heads on the catwalk satisfy your requirements?

Rui De Matos : Yes, it had become a necessity. When we have three operas in rotation and some of the lighting designers require more than half of the fixtures on the catwalk for their production, despite the large number of fixed lights, we can’t satisfy them all.
They are forced to share sources because there is no possibility to modify their positions between two performances. By installing three motorized fixtures on each catwalk, we solve the problem of change-overs, with more possibilities for adjustment.

… now hosts the newest generation of fixtures: High End SolaFrame 3000.


SLU : How many have you installed?

Rui De Matos : We have invested in a total of seven SolaFrame 3000s: three on catwalk 1, three on catwalk 2 over the auditorium, and one spare.

SLU : Nicolas, did you do any illuminance measurements on stage?

Nicolas Da Canal : Yes, at 42 m, with a tight beam of 7°, we obtain 820 lux at the centre and 767 lux at the edge, so it is really smooth and uniform, without any hot spot.

The SolaFrame 3000: 1000 W white LED engine, progressive CMY+CTO, color wheel, two gobo wheels, 4-blade framing module with complete closure, 7°-55° zoom, iris, progressive frost, prism, animation wheel and a nominal luminous flux of 37,000 lm.

SLU : Besides the high luminous flux, what were your requirements?

Rui De Matos : We have high standards in terms of quiet operation. This is crucial. It is absolutely essential to reduce noise because the more automated units used, the more resonances there, are and it can produce a deafening noise. The Sola 3000 is very quiet.

Nicolas Da Canal : Another parameter that is very important in theatre, especially at long range, is the frost, and the possibility to apply it at any zoom angle. The SolaFrame 3000 does indeed have this particular characteristic. I just wish it could be zoomed in a little more, just two degrees narrower would do.

Rui De Matos : The Sola 3000 has a really good frost. We use a lot of frost in the scenes and the frost is quite satisfactory. I don’t try to blur the beam by de-focusing, I prefer to focus sharply and then engage a frost so that the look is cleaner. There are two gobo wheels, which is always interesting, even if there are only two or three gobos that suit us on each one, such as the foliage that we use most often.

SLU : Let’s talk about the colors. How does the color mixing suit you?

Rui and Nicolas in the new room equipped for the tests.

Nicolas Da Canal : Originally, we were not particularly going for subtractive color mixing, but at this level of luminous output, it still represents the majority of the products on the market. In my opinion, it’s not the best solution, but we can work with it.
At this working distance and for frontals, we only try to make slight corrections and we hardly use the CMY mixing, which doesn’t enable us to obtain the same tints as gels.
We had the same problem with the discharge lamps, except that the CRI was higher. In this case it is 70, but a filter raises the TM 30 value to 85. However, we have to admit that the magenta-cyan blend makes it possible to obtain quite interesting and useful hues.

Rui De Matos : The colors most often used are mainly correctors that look like a Lee 201, 200, deep blues and nice ambers for warm colors. It’s also very important to have a deep red and a progressive CTO and CTB. We don’t need perfection, but we do need well calibrated fixtures, all of which react in the same way to obtain the same hue everywhere with perfect uniformity.

Portrait de Rui De Matos

Rui Dematos, Head of Lighting at The Bastille.

This is the first time we’ve meet Rui De Matos, appointed to this position a year ago, after the retirement of Didier Paillet. For all those who, like us, don’t know him, Rui is an authentic opera lighting designer.
Having arrived in the early days of The Bastille in 1989, he was part of the small lighting team – no more than six people – who cleared the path and carried out the installation for the opening season.

Rui De Matos : “It was quite an adventure, because you don’t open a theatre of this size every day.” I started as a console operator when the Opéra Bastille opened, then I became responsible for lighting production. It is a different role from that of department chief, but it is also a team management role.

My objective was simply to be a lighting designer and that’s what I did for 22 years… now I keep doing lighting but in a different way, or I advise lighting designers on new productions. I also did lighting projects externally where I did productions for Bastille, Elixir d’Amour at Le Marinsky, La Bayadère in Boston, Les Contes d’Hoffmann at La Scala, Don Carlos at Palau des Arts in Valencia…

SLU : What changes will you make to the lighting department?

Rui De Matos : I would like to change the lighting consoles for next year as a priority. I’d also like to continue upgrading the equipment to LED sources and replace our moving heads. We also need to find an LED source that can replace our old 4 kW HMI fixtures, which we have been using for nearly 20 years, and for which we are having more and more difficulty finding spare parts.

More information on the High End Systems Website.

 

NDH 20: NEUMANN’S FIRST STUDIO HEADPHONE

Neumann is such a well-known brand, obviously for their reference microphones, and for their studio monitors since the takeover of KH. Here comes now their first studio monitoring headphones with its neat finish, unveiled at last NAMM.

The Neumann NDH 20 is a closed-back studio headphone combining excellent isolation with the carefully balanced sound image and outstanding resolution you would expect from a Neumann product. It is thus ideally suited to monitoring, editing and mixing tasks, even in loud and noisy environments.

Wolfgang Fraissinet

Wolfgang Fraissinet, President Neumann.Berlin explains: “Unlike most other closed-back headphones, the NDH 20 is also suited to mixing purposes. An unusually flat frequency response and natural stereo image allow for mixing with confidence and ensure compatibility to all playback systems. The NDH 20 is a dream come true: reliable studio-grade monitoring – even on the road.”

The NDH 20’s newly designed 38-mm drivers with high-gauss neodymium magnets ensure high sensitivity and low distortion. In other words, the NDH 20 would not need a dedicated headphone amplifier; it sounds just as great on mobile devices such as laptop computers.

Its entire construction is true Neumann quality: The headband is made of flexible spring steel while the ear cup covers are machined from lightweight aluminum. Large and soft memory foam ear pads make the NDH 20 a pleasure to wear for long periods without fatigue. For easy transportation, the NDH 20 is foldable.

The NDH 20 features two detachable cables (straight/coiled) for easy replacement.

Like many headphones, for easy transportation, the NDH 20 is foldable and comes into an elegant pouch.


We’re waiting to test it, either at ISE Amsterdam or PL+S. You may read below some specs that say a lot about the positioning of this model in the upper range of the market of studio headphones.

More info on the Neumann Website.

 

Elation Proteus Hybrid: taking on the elements. SoundLightUp test.

In 2017, our spies notified us of the qualitative and commercial improvements being implemented by Elation. We soon discovered the potential of their products, a good reason to give them our full attention.

Our first encounter up-close with Elation, we tested their DaVinci LED Spot, which, together with Picasso, spearheads a range known as “Artiste” – effective, solid, cost-effective and built well enough to shake up the European market. Behind the choice of these pictographic designations, we quickly understood that there was a massive project to establish a beachhead on the Old Continent.

Make no mistake, Elation – the professional branch of the American DJ group – has just celebrated its 25th anniversary and boasts a formidable strike force, with 400 employees located all over the world. Their products have been very popular in many countries.

For this second incursion into Elation, what we are attempting to capture is a normal-looking and yet very special fixture: an IP65-rated, motorized Spot/Beam/Wash hybrid, with a lamp source. This is a great idea for any rental company concerned about seeing their stock take on the weather. Now let’s see if the Proteus Hybrid proves to be a serious candidate.

Reconnaissance mission

[private]
100 Proteus Hybrids in sneak preview perched on the Burj Khalifa in Dubai – the highest building in the world – facing winds of 140 km/h. 500 in the stock of one of the largest German lighting rental companies. Then the lighting designers of the Beyoncé+Jay-Z Tour decided to conquer the world, armed with 144 Proteus Hybrids. This is no longer a scouting mission, it’s the real invasion that is being staged now.

The back of the base looks bullet proof. This fixture is solid, really very solid.

We’ve managed to corner a specimen of this IP65 hybrid Beam/Spot/Wash fixture, with its Philips MSD 21R 470 W, 8000 K discharge lamp.
The specifications of this Philips lamp are already enough to burn your retinas. Judge for yourself:
Weight: 110 grams. Luminous efficiency: 49 lm/W. Average flux: 23,000 lm. CRI: 80.

Before we can open fire, we will have to draw Proteus out of its encampment. The single-unit flight case opens from the top and the side, and has two large accessory compartments. Looking at the bottom of the base of the fixture, we find four Omega brackets positioned on their steel plates, separated by a distance of 175 mm between centers. A recess in the body accommodates the safety cable. It takes muscle to pull it out by the two large handles, and serious effort to turn it over.
Once we get it settled on its broad feet, we will give you more details. Weighing in at 38 kg (the price you pay for waterproofing), with a super-dense head sitting on an almost modest base, it has an aluminum and plastic shell with ridges all over it. Yet, with its ballistic lines and all its parts held together by a battalion of silver Torx screws, it looks indestructible.

On its base, a touch screen is accompanied by tactile keys. On the opposite side, five connectors – one PowerCon TrueOne, two RJ45 EtherCon, two XLR5 DMX – are securely attached and protected by latex caps. Removing and re-applying these caps is not easy, but training can help. Cleverly designed, the fuse is also protected from the elements thanks to its waterproof cocoon. Even more subtle, a wireless DMX antenna is nestled behind the right-side handle.

The rubber caps block all routes to the brain of Proteus, rendering the fixture virtually watertight.

The wireless DMX antenna concealed in the handle.

Assault course

After this brief overview, let’s take it up a notch. The body of the fixture is locked in both pan and tilt by two strong latches. We pop these open so that we can completely manipulate this beast. The 150 mm lens stares at us coldly, like the muzzle of a cannon ready to fire.

Here, we’ve cleared the breech to access the electronics.

The ridges on its shell are actually breathing gills, which reveal another internal chassis. To find out for sure, we decided to use the most effective tool: a Torx H3 screwdriver.

Proteus’ armor consists of two central plates, the rear base and the front bracket, all fitted with watertight seals.

We remove the six screws from each of the two ventral sections. The piece of cast aluminum is machined from one solid block. An inner safety sling securely attaches it to the body of the fixture.

The magazine of eight interchangeable rotating gobos, flanked by fourteen static gobos and fourteen color filters. Behind these, there is the animation wheel.

While the components are stuffed in with a shoehorn, everything is perfectly located and intelligently assembled. To access the gobos, which are the only elements besides the lamp that need to be changed from time to time, the process is easier than we expected.
Two connectors must be disconnected, then the two screws on the sides. Then you can simply slide out the focal module to remove the gobo wheel.

At the front end of the module, a honeycomb lens is used to eliminate any irregularities in the beam.

The CMY module is more complicated to remove. Just to be on the safe side, we’re going to leave it where it is. There is just enough space to make out the simple flags on tracks with belt drives. There is no way to get a good look at it, so we precede to the next step of opening the arms by removing twelve Torx screws.
Two big surprises await us here. All of the wiring is routed through a waterproof conduit worthy of a civil engineering project, including the power supply for the lamp ignitor. What is even more disconcerting – and contrary to conventional practice – is that there is no circuit board, and the tilt motor has disappeared!

The thick hose may surprise you, but it is completely watertight.

We decide to go straight to the head first. This piece is a huge aluminum block held in place by eight screws. The output lens is attached to the end of it. Be careful to secure the pan and tilt locks, otherwise the balance of the head is such that the fixture tilts backward.

We then discover another large metal cube, on which all the circuit boards are located.
The tilt motor is also mounted on a spring-loaded sliding plate, protected from the elements. The zoom/focus module is revealed. At the end of its course, the frost filter hangs over the zoom mechanism. The two prisms, radial and linear, are the final elements.


Above the motor we find, as elsewhere in the fixture, bags of silica beads to absorb residual moisture.

Now, we tackle the most sensitive part: the lamp receptacle. The housing is easily removed, as only four screws hold it in place, and, behind it, we find an impressive cooling system. Completely waterproof, even the smallest of connectors are sealed in water-repellent resin. This huge module combines water-cooling, active ventilation, cast aluminum and an impeller. Elation took no risks with the temperature management of the lamp.


The front section, terminated by the frost, is a single piece running along the optical path.

This window facilitates access to the prism, which is located at the base of the zoom module. As we work our way through the innards of this fixture, we discover an increasing number of fans.

The cooling block is so impressive, we feel like we’re dissecting a state-of-the-art LED fixture.

After a few more turns of a few more screws, the heat sink is removed. There is full and unobstructed access. We can now see the Platinum 21R, Philips’ most powerful short arc lamp with an integrated reflector. Once the two layers of armor have been removed, it can be replaced quickly.

The most beautiful part of Proteus, hidden away from public view. The copper tubing of the cooling system snakes through the fins of the heat sink.

Once again, there is no risk of overheating with an impeller blasting air directly onto the ceramic of the lamp.


As our final step in disassembly, we remove the power supply unit located in the base. Here again, everything has been designed to be resistant to water and dust. The base is completely enclosed, only the sides can be removed.

A rare photo of an operator working on a fixture.

Before reassembling the Proteus, we stop to admire for a moment the level of precision and the effort that have gone into making it waterproof.
The protection has been pushed to its limits and seems more than enough to confirm the IP65 rating reported by Elation.

Triple agent

The temperatures in the base and around the lamp are constantly displayed on the screen. One setting allows you to choose between Celsius and Fahrenheit degrees.

When switched on, the display holds for forty-six seconds before allowing us to work with it. During this time, software versions scroll the screen in computer coding.
The display settles down on the menu page. In the upper portion of the screen, the temperature monitors are displayed in real time, as well as the DMX indicators.

To access the menu, you have to hold down the “mode” button for a good ten seconds. This necessary hold time is way of preventing water splashes from inadvertently changing the settings of the fixture. A glance through the menu tree allows you to change DMX or RDM modes and addresses, IP addresses for sACN and ArtNet or the factory-integrated wireless configuration. The tabs are straightforward and the navigation through them is logical.

The IP configuration menu allows the modification of both address and class.

Another very useful gauge monitors the residual moisture in the head or base of the fixture.

When you start the lamp, a preheat indicator lights up, as does the ventilation when the ignitor buzzes. It still takes about forty seconds for it to reach full power. It only takes five seconds to shut it down completely.

Throughout our entire test, the cooling system lives up to this fixture’s overbuilt standards. The fan blades spin noisily, 53 dB(A) measured one meter from the unit. This is not a big deal for a fixture intended for outdoor use, especially since the temperature management is impressive: the Proteus Hybrid remains as cool to the touch as ever, even after several hours of operation.

Measurements

As a precaution, we should always let the test instruments speak before any disassembly. First observations and first surprises. Our particular example, despite having a lamp that is already a little used, has a very high flux. If we had to make only a single comparison, the Proteus Hybrid is in the vicinity of the Robe MegaPointe. Proteus strapped on our test bench, the values do not lie.

Beam mode, narrow beam.
At the tightest beam angle, the enormous impact of more than a million lux blinds our sensor, denying us a proper reading.

Beam mode, 20° beam.
In Beam Mode, at 20°, we measure 17,250 lux in the center, exceeding 15,300 lumens, with a significant hot spot.

Spot mode, tight beam.
The maximum flux is reached at this setting, peaking at 18,300 lumens, with 98,500 lux in the center.

Spot mode, 20° beam.
In Spot Mode, at 20°, it drops slightly to 14,600 lumens, but with a more uniform flux.

Spot mode, wide beam.
At the maximum angle we get to 31° at the sharp border. To be absolutely precise, the fixture opens to nearly 40°, but it is almost impossible to make it sharp at this angle. However, the flux remains as impressive as ever, at 14,300 lumens.

Wash mode, wide beam.
The most frustrating is the Wash Mode, handicapped by the use of a frost lens that soaks up a lot of light. The flux drops to 12,000 lumens at a divergence of 27°, measured at i/10 (1/10th center illuminance).

Observation confirms the results of our curve calculations. This Philips lamp generates an estimated 23,000 lumens of raw flux, which is optimized by Elation in Beam mode. The Spot mode does quite well, also considering the type of the source.
The lenses of the optical system have some weaknesses, however – on the one hand in the uniformity of the beam and, on the other hand, at the extremities of the focal lengths.

In the field

Let’s examine the performance of Proteus in real-world conditions.

Dimmer
A fixture like this, which is as comfortable in the wind, rain and snow as a tank, is likewise equipped with a real light cannon in its turret. Its orders are quite clear: show no mercy, give no quarter – even if it means sacrificing the finesse of its intensity. The curve shows inertia up to 10%, then a steep swing up to 60%, at which point the dimmer is already at its maximum. The fine teeth of the shutter blades are visible at the lower values…

Focus
Intrigued, we track down the culprits. On this type of luminaire, it is always the zoom-focus combination, which is quite delicate to adjust, with a very wide depth of field.
This particular amplitude of the focal point begins in the depths of the fixture and can thus reveal some aberrations, but also some pleasant surprises, such as the possibility to focus on the mounts of the color wheel or on the inner honeycomb lens.

Could this be due to the activation of the third control channel setting, called “Color and fixed gobos changed to any position”? Nevertheless, it is possible to focus on the supports of gobo and color wheels, or even on the internal optics!

The zoom goes from one end of its range to the other in 0.75 seconds, which is relatively quick, given the size of the fixture. An autofocus mode is available, on two zones at 15 and at 20 meters, but I think it would benefit from a more detailed explanation.
At the tightest focussed angle, Beam mode allows you to go down to 2.7° with the full beam, or 0.4° using the smallest of the beam-reducing gobos.
In Spot mode, the maximum divergence with a sharp gobo is 31°. At the cost of a few yellow rings around the edges, it is possible to open it up to 39.6°. This is performance that allows the Proteus to perform sniper duty, which is exactly what it was designed for.

Pan-Tilt
The pan and tilt movements are closely linked to the weight of the head. Inertia naturally occurs when starting and stopping these movements. It takes 3.76 seconds to traverse one and a half revolutions (540°) of pan. For a tilt inversion, over 270°, it takes 2.1 seconds. However, the positioning remains accurate and the trajectories are clean.

Shutter
By contrast, the strobe, which also uses the shutter blades, is really fast. It can fire off 18 flashes per second.

Colors
Let’s dwell for a moment on the colors. We suffer a misfire on our first attempt to measure the initial color temperature. We get 5760 K, instead of the 8000 K indicated on the lamp. The reason is undoubtedly the presence of a “High CRI” filter at the output of the beam, in order to counterbalance the dominant characteristics of the MSD Platinum.

The subtractive color mixing system uses fairly light shades for yellow and cyan, which allow 87% and 38% of the flux to pass through, respectively. The magenta allows 9% of the light to pass through. This Philips lamp has little red and almost no violet. Under these conditions, pink, fuchsia or purple colors will be difficult to achieve.

CMY tones are generally a little cold and lack precision for the most intense ones.

The Yellow leans slightly towards green. The magenta is itself violet, an American practice.

The red and blue obtained from the CMY mixing.


The color wheel offers fourteen supplementary colors. The proposed set of these is consistent.

The red and blue are standard. The greens, yellows, oranges and aqua do well; although they have a slightly metallic aspect. As expected, the pinks and magenta unfortunately suffer from the lamp technology chosen by Philips.

With the CTO at full, the color temperature drops to nearly 3000 K.

The CTO flag offers a warmer tint, more pink than amber, which is interesting for skin tones. It will also prove very useful for “warming up” the color mixes, even if it means sacrificing a little bit of luminous flux.

Gobos

Finally, let’s have a look at the various effects. There are eight patterns on the rotating gobo wheel, divided between aerial and projection types, logically with a majority of mid-air designs.
The fixed gobo wheel has four beam-reduction gobos and ten basic gobos, which can be used in combination with prisms or the animation wheel.

A small problem we encountered on this Proteus, a first-generation test unit, is a slight shift in the axes of the gobos. This results in slightly off-centre rotations, with minor jerks.

In addition to the classic starry night, the patterns of the parallel bars, the arabesque swirls or the water design will be appreciated.

Effects and prisms.
The animation wheel is an infinitely scrolling, bidirectional disc with a streaked, dendritic pattern to give the beam the feeling of floating or a moiré pattern. The prisms employed in the fixture are a four-facet linear type and an eight-facet radial type.
These two prisms are squeezed, with very little gap between them, to fit into the narrow optical path of Proteus. It is not uncommon to see the edges of the prismatic image eaten by the edges of the optics at too large an angle, or halos being created by being reflected from the edges of the lenses.

An example of the animation. Thanks to the focal length, it is possible to switch the focus ahead of or behind the effect disc.

The cutoff of the outer disc is clearly visible through the unit’s optics.

An overview of the two different prisms, with and without gobos. The overlaps are practically piled up, but they have a certain impact.

Mixing the radial and linear prisms does not produce a new prismatic effect, but can be used to obtain abstract compositions that can be painted onto a set.

As previously mentioned about the gobos, the rotation of the prism is slightly skewed and occasionally jerky.

Special report

The Proteus is a long-throw moving head light with a record flux for this class of fixture, designed to produce high intensity beams in the air. But above all, it is the first Beam on the market to be IP65 rated, virtually impervious to dust and weather.
Under the torture of a jet of water, the Proteus’ menu eventually woke up from its sleep, but the luminaire didn’t flinch, continuing to penetrate the night with its tracer beam.


Its waterproof armor is a real success, which makes up for a relatively modest set of lenses and colors, and will allow lighting companies to deploy them outdoors, at festivals or as an architectural effect, without the need for expensive and heavy rain protection.
For the rental company who is looking for an all-terrain unit, for all conditions of wind and weather, at a truly competitive price, the Proteus Hybrid will undoubtedly be an ideal choice.

More info on the Elation Professional website.

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Peter Bence with Audio-Technica: fortissimo piano!

2.0 type of artist but a hell of a keyboard player, Peter Bence is indeed sending the social networks’ speedos into turmoil, and now making his live public go bananas. We met him to discover his passion for the sound he plays and produces, with the help of Audio-Technica.

But first and foremost, if you don’t know the artist, Google his name and listen to his work, especially his very elaborate piano sound. Peter doesn’t hide it, while worshiping his instrument, he’s not looking for a natural sound, but for a fatter sound, filling the whole space to replace whatever part of the arrangements of the song covers he goes for freely.

He welcomed us with Bertrand Allaume, Product Manager for Audio-Technica, before his Casino de Paris show during one hour, while warming up his fingers on the keyboard. Let him be thanked for a rather rare gesture. Waiting for him to join us, we scroll through his microphones inventory with Bertrand.

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Two out of his three condenser ATM 350a, with their magnetic and goosenecks with two different sizes.

SLU : Quite a bunch of microphones here…

Bertrand Allaume : Yes, Peter has a very elaborate miking technique that requires quite a number of transducers. For instance, I can see three new condenser ATM 350a, each mounted on its magnetic accessory for piano fitting, one for the low frequencies, one for the low-mid, the last one for the treble. We have two versions of the gooseneck, long and short.

For aerial pick-up, the piano sound basics, we have here a pair of AE3000, condenser mid-size ¾ inch diaphragm models, versatile and very convenient for a majority of instruments. The one for the treble has the low-cut filter switched on, and both have the -10 dB Pad on. The short distance to the piano make the output level very high, hence this choice.

The two AE3000 for main pick-up. Also notice down right the third ATM350a in charge of treble reinforcement.

Peter Bence, 2.0 artist

Peter Bence coming up on stage allows us to deeply understand the sound pick-up ins and outs.

Concentration, precise ear but real pleasure every instant as well for Peter and us, as we watch him increase in power.

SLU : Hi Peter. Who did choose the type and number of mikes and their position on the piano ? You did choose them ?

Peter Bence : Yes, originally with Attila Arki (Audio-Technica General Manager for Central Europe) who insisted on testing the models with the magnetic mikes and placement, and placing them into the holes of the piano to get a nice full bass sound.
But you know, every concert you experience a little more and I adjusted a little bit accordingly to how it sounds. So now I think still not 100% perfect, but it’s, like, 80%. Actually I know now how the solution really will be perfect; we will have more of these magnetic mikes (ATM350a + support), I think four or five and, you know, they’ll focus on specific regions and then we have the ambience separately, so … But right now it’s pretty good actually, and it of course depends on the piano.

Peter demonstrate the variety of sounds he can get from an open piano, including the ones you obtain NOT playing on the keyboard. Bertrand Allaume doesn’t waste a crumb of it!

Don’t forget the piano itself changes from venue to venue, and it does have its importance.

SLU : Do you have the very same piano in every venue ?

Peter Bence : Two different models: the Yamaha CFX and the Steinway D, Concert Grand.

SLU : They don’t sound the same at all, I guess…

Peter Bence : Indeed not. We can adjust some things with the console with the equalizer that’s perfect but the really it’s kind of annoying because sometimes it’s the same piano model but, depending on how and when was the piano produced, maybe this one was five years ago but the same model in a different venue was made maybe ten or fifteen or twenty years ago, and it sounds completely different.

SLU : It is tuned before every concert, especially since the way you play it does imply a rather unusual treatment, isn’t it? (smile)

Peter Bence : It’s usually tunes before sound check and right before the concert before they let people in, so it’s always in tune and and it’s tuned directly before that so it can be really accurate.

The Yamaha CFX installed at the Casino de Paris, slightly less “shaken” than the ones you can see in Peter’s videos. As it is, some other performers have done the same… amongst them Jamie Cullum!

SLU : But you need more than a piano, because you use your piano also like a percussion, so how do you pick up the percussive part, what kind of sound do you want while you do your funny stuff, and how do you record your loops and how do you do all your things ?

Peter Bence : For plucking the strings it’s actually perfect because the mics are picking the string sound perfectly, like this (boinnng), you know, that’s perfect for these mikes, but for some percussion parts it’s actually picking up most of it but we’re planning to put more mikes…

SLU : Ah, even more?

Peter Bence : Yeah! (laughs) maybe in the future because right now, you see, I have this kind of a drum down here, but I have to use this because I cannot really do this kick sound anymore. It’s only maybe right on an upright piano but here I cannot kick the piano, so this kick drum is for sure happening! But there are some sounds that I need to pull from my Loop Station from my home studio, so it’s mixed with the live sound and it gives a proper percussion sound. My music is piano only and nothing else, that’s how my public is feeling me.

One ATM 350a in very close view. On the long run, Peter wants to have five of them on the piano frame.

SLU : Indeed, you were mentioning 7 microphones to pick up your own sound. You wouldn’t be satisfied with a more classic way to capture it?

Peter Bence : No, you know I’ve seen so many people or concerts where there’s only two microphones, it’s impossible to get a good piano sound. I mean, I understand that maybe some for classical music it’s good to have like to have a clean, raw piano sound, but for my kind of stuff I think the best is to recreate the full power with all the bass sounds and all this punchiness and everything.

SLU : So, my stupid question (because he’s gonna kill me) is: why don’t you play a sampled piano or maybe a silent piano and you’d use all the percussion, of course live, but you’d use a silent piano and a lot of samples like a pile of pancakes ready to deliver a nice fat sound…

Peter Bence : You know, I have thought about this and I tought it could work, because in my home studio I also have a Roland keyboard which is pretty good – and I have a really good computer of course with all this amazing sample libraries like Keyscape, taken from a real Yamaha, the sounds are good and if I do some premixing with Pro Tools it sounds pretty amazing and actually sounds better than than a live piano for sure but the thing is that if I play it live oh
that’s another thing! (he strikes a piano chord). So I’m waiting for the technology that could use a super computer with a super realistic keyboard and then maybe I would switch to that. The piano, as it is, is not very 21rst Century, for classical it’s ok but not for my own style, this is why I’m still looking for more punchiness. I get some comments on Youtube asking why I don’t show my bass player! (laughs). There’s none of course! Everything is a matter of pickup and mixing. I don’t double with a bass or a synth, it’s only work of what a piano can actually deliver.

The AT5047, a nice microphone with 4 rectangular diaphragms, noiseless and precise, designed for studio use.

SLU : Why did you choose Audio-Technica?

Peter Bence : Because I love what I can get from these, on stage as well as in the studio.
Of course those are two different worlds, this is why I use AT5047s while recording, and they’re not used on stage.

SLU : One very last question. Who’s mixing every night on tour?

Peter Bence : At this time, we work with local teams, but I think now the time has come that we need to have our own sound guy.
Especially now we do travel with our own light engineer (and light designer as well), and we’re about to get our own sound man because he’s the most important man for FOH! (laughs)

Potar, Lea and Pierre

Lea Mastrippolito, sound assistant who just started in Potar Hurlant Warehouse, the most logical and compulsory way to begin a career at Potar Hurlant. Pierre Mounoury on its way to leave it, in charge of welcoming the artist and FOH on the night we attended the Casino de Paris.

Time has come to meet the local Potar Hurlant/Novelty sound crew, providing, like others companies do, some Paris venues on a long-term basis with resident light & pro audio equipment, to reduce the cost for the one-shot gigs.

SLU : The L-Acoustics system and the lighting rig all come from your stock, then ?…

Pierre Mounoury (local sound tech at Casino de Paris) : Yes, with one exception tonight, an unusual lighting kit supplied by another rental company (RégieLumière/B Live), and left here for a previous show from another artist, used tonight for Peter, but tomorrow the standard Novelty lighting kit will be back in place.

Downstage and stageleft, SB18 in cardioid positioning and 6 Kara

SLU : You’re very welcoming then tonight… (smile)

Pierre Mounoury : Yes but not only that ! I’m in charge of the warehouse at Potar Hurlant. We alternate here with Kevin Chaplain, who has priority over this venue. We always do some apprentice period in the warehouse before working on a gig.
Lea just got in, actually. I’m finishing my warehouse time, and slowly coming out for various operations in whatever hall we’re in charge of: Casino de Paris, La Cigale, la Boule Noire, and more.


Four removables 5XTs to add some clarity and liveness to the first rows.

SLU : Can you tell us more in detail what sound kit you’re using?

Pierre Mounoury : Downstairs at orchestra pit level the L/R FOH is 5 Kara and 3 SB19 (cardioid mode), all stacked on the stage borders, with additional 5XTs for lip fill. des 5XT. Hung up there’s a left/right kit of 9 Kara with only one central cluster of 4 SB18, in cardioid mode too.
Finally some X8s offer more precision under the balcony, and some X12s on the sides. In standing audience mode, we take out the 5XTs and we add more X12s for infill. The Yamaha CL3 mixer comes also as standard in this Casino de Paris permanent kit, providing 64 channels in 48 kHz.

The balcony PA, 9 Kara and 4 SB18 in cardioid set-up, completed by X12s on the sides.

SLU : How went Peter’s get in and set up ?

Pierre Mounoury : Very well indeed. He’s got his own mikes, he placed them, came to the FOH console to adjust his own EQ and mix, including FX. A member of his crew played some piano so he could listen and work in good conditions, antoher very skilled piano player by the way. For me this is really babysitting, I’m just here as technical support mainly.

The Yamaha CL3 not so badly positioned at the back of the audience, and, on the left, you can see the interface triggering Peter’s loops from a computer controlled by a member of his crew.

SLU : And he spotted that the piano was not tuned the same way as yesterday…

Pierre Mounoury : Yes, that was somewhat of a problem for him as some stems or sequences are sent by his sound guy, so the combination with his live playing was not truly adequate.
He plays with earbuds to stay click aligned, so he can hear everything. Tonight should be OK, anyway.

Conclusion tuned in 432 Hz (because it does contain the Schematics of the Universe)

A nice bunch of young technicians, up front Pierre Mounouri riding his Yamaha desk, then his assistant Lea Mastrippolito, and behind stands Valentin Bodier at his lighting desk, on behalf of Régie Lumière.

The challenge is enormous indeed. Not only filling up the 2,000 seat Casino de Paris with people, but also with such a big sound only using a piano (and some loops). This is far from obvious, especially since the whole Peter Bence set list is made of overproduced pop hits covers.
He does achieve it, though, thanks to a huge bunch of audio tricks, such as helium-inflated piano sound, with spectral richness and density far from « normal » rendition of this instrument. From pick-up to diffusion, this is a total achievement.

Come on, let’s get a bit fussy, the amount of low frequencies needed makes the mounting of the transducers directly on the piano soundboard a bit tricky, you can hear slightly the energy of the pianist in the subs, in particular his foot stomping on the pedal, and inserting some low-cut filters would play against the desired final rendition.
Maybe all the microphones should be put on external semi-heavy microphone stands, as Peter wishes to go up to 5 ATM 350a in close miking in the future, on magnetic supports. It would also be nice to have some neat external reverb along with some snapshots to make the sound and delays evolve during the show. The inclusion of his own FOH mixer in his team will surely bring even more ear pleasure to the audience.

Peter Bence warming up his fingers. The wedge monitor is only there to bring up some SPL and act as a backup, the real monitor control comes from the ear monitors, because of the click track.

We’ll come back to see Peter again for sure during his next tour to follow the evolution of his forthcoming 7 mikes (or more!) pick-up technique, everything’s possible with him. Thanks to Bertrand Allaume, too, for his technical and musical ease, very handy while crafting such a report.

More info on :

* By the way, the translation for Potar Hurlant is « Screaming Fader »…

Finally, to apprehend all of Peter Bence own magic, lend an ear to one of his most energetic solo piano piece :

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Robe Pointes to Naked Truth on Fey’s Desnuda Tour

Lighting Designer Pablo Gutierrez utilized 52 x of Robe’s Pointe multi-functional moving lights at the core of his nice looking lighting design for the launch of Mexican singer Fey’s new ‘Desnuda’ (Nude) tour. The tour kicked off in full-on style at the 18,000 capacity Arena Ciudad de México (Mexico City Arena) in the country’s vibrant metropolis.

Fey is a multi-talented Latin Grammy nominated singer, songwriter, designer, dancer, record producer, director and actress who has recorded seven successful studio albums and was massive in the 1990’s following the release of her first album “Fey” in 1995. The extremely proactive celebrity wanted to make maximum impact for her singing and live touring comeback, so her management team asked Pablo to create a suitably high impact production design for the show.

Spectacular but scalable

As well as being spectacular, the design had to be scalable for an arena tour which follows in 2019 and for potential festival appearances. Pablo was recommended independently by three different people for the job of designing Desnuda. He is known for his fresh approach to lighting design and his imagination and flair in harmonizing the disciplines of lighting, video and set.

For this Arena Ciudad de México gig, audio, lighting, staging and all aspects of technical production – including video from La Catrina Films and rigging from TYM Riggers – were managed by Live Entertainment a company Pablo also runs together with Soho Avila, who was this high-profile show’s production manager.

Female empowerment


The Pointes were arranged on a series of six trusses above the stage forming a trapezoidal shape – wider at the top. Each of these trusses moved in and out individually on an automation system.
“Fey wanted to reflect a strong sense of female empowerment in the show and the overall production” explained Pablo, which gave him the inspiration for the shape.

Its geometry contrasted with the rectangular lines of the five large LED video surfaces onstage, and when in the ‘home’ position, the lowest of the six trusses was trimmed just above the top of the central video screen … so the shape radiated out downstage from there, adding to the overall depth of the rig.

Naturally Pablo also had a bunch of other lights on the stage in multiple positions, but his Pointes were the visual centerpiece. When the Pointe trusses were flown in, they dramatically closed-down the performance space immediately evoking a sense of intimacy.

The heart of the performance

The video screen design ensured that Fey was right at the heart of the performance, together with the impressive playback footage directed by Antonia Roma and the live camera direction of Jorge Olvera. With that much video on the stage, Pablo also knew he would need very bright lightsources to ensure a balance.

Once the video screen layout was in place, the lighting positions became relatively obvious. In fact, while the overall stage design underwent some revisions, the lighting elements of it stayed the same as Pablo’s first drawing.
The bank of Pointes also provided essential key and front wash lighting for the acoustic section of the set which was performed on the B stage, located immediately behind the FOH riser at the back of the arena. So they were invaluable in every way, and the beams had no problem projecting right to the back of the arena.

Pablo used almost every feature and function of the Pointes – supplied by locally based rental company PRO3 to the production – extensively throughout the show. He created a diversity of cool looks and holographic effects with the prisms as Fey rocked through her pacey power-pop performance, pausing for breath only during a short spell on the B-stage!
Pablo has been using Robe products on and off in his work for around 12 years. The Pointe has become “a standard on most of my designs” and in fact he is one of the key influencers responsible for the Pointe becoming so well established in Mexico, giving the brand a foothold for the expansion it is enjoying today!
Pablo stated, “The Pointe is a remarkable fixture – the colors are really rich and vital, and the effects are dynamic and fast. They are perfect for a pop show like this with lots of dancers and action”;

He made the most of the fixture’s capabilities as both a spot and a beam fixture and created some great laser simulation looks that combined beautifully with the real lasers on the show – four brand new Kvant Spectrum 30s. The challenge with this first Desnuda tour show was the programming time which was tight and under pressure!

While they had the music for some time beforehand and could program a reasonable amount of lighting in pre-vis, the video content – a major element of the show aesthetic – was only received a few days before the gig. Only then was Pablo able to finesse and fine-tune the essential detail in all the lighting cues.

The first song alone contained 120 cues, and the rest were similar in complexity … however it all paid off in the end as the show took the art of pop presentation and production to new and exciting levels … to the delight of Fey’s thousands of enthusiastic fans.
The artist and her talented production team proved that she was right back on form and ready to hit the road ahead running in 2019, where Desnuda plays throughout Mexico and central America starting in February and March.

More info on Robe Lighting.

 

Ertekin Elektronik as a New Harman Distributor to Support Customer Demand in Turkey

HARMAN Professional Solutions, the global leader in audio, video, lighting and control systems, including networked today announced its new distributor partnership with Ertekin Elektronik in Turkey.

The distribution agreement entitles Ertekin Elektronik the right to distribute the full range of products offered by HARMAN Professional Solutions. The agreement covers the JBL Professional, AMX, Martin, Soundcraft, AKG, Crown, dbx, BSS, Lexicon, and Studer brands, providing a 360-degree solution to customers requiring audio, video, lighting and control solutions.

“We are excited to partner with Ertekin Elektronik in this very important region,” said Mark Coombes, Regional Director, MEA at HARMAN Professional Solutions. “We are looking forward to our collaboration with Ertekin Elektronik to lead our iconic brands towards the future. We are confident their experience and in-depth knowledge of the Turkish market to support our customers’ needs on an ongoing basis.”

“We are delighted to be distributing the complete HARMAN Professional Solutions range in Turkey,” said Yurder Ertekin, Sales and Marketing Manager of Ertekin Elektronik, “HARMAN offers a great portfolio of quality brands, which are completely aligned with our customers’ needs. With our expertise and the brands that HARMAN Professional Solutions offer we will be able to offer a complete solution.”

Ertekin Elektronik is a leading distributor in the Turkish region and has vast experience in the audio, video, lighting and control solutions within the Turkish region since 1967.

The distribution agreement comes into effect immediately. Please contact [email protected] for any additional questions.

 

Martin Mac Encore Wash CLD & WRM. SoundLightUp test.

Introduced in September 2017, the Mac Encore Performance was a big hit in the field of LED spot/profile moving heads for live entertainment, television and event industries.
Now, here is the wash, also available with two versions of white source, in the form of an attractive fixture designed for environments and applications with very demanding requirements in terms of light quality.

To put it simply, the current trend in wash light technology is moving towards fairly compact fixtures, emitting a beam with diffused edges directly from lenses that are mounted on a “pancake” of LEDs. They are lightweight, versatile and fit in the palm of your hand (I’m exaggerating, but only slightly).
In this case, Martin (who, let’s not forget, gave us the Mac Aura and Quantum Wash) is proposing a fixture with a design very similar to that of the spot/profile version (the “Performance” model), a 28.5 kg beast, with a very successful design, breaking with the trend towards the tiny, flattened fixtures we see on the wash market.

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Like the Mac Encore Performance, the Encore Wash is available in two versions: Wash CLD (“Cold”), with 6000 K daylight output, and Wash WRM (“Warm”), which emits a warm light (like tungsten) at 3000 K.
The 468 watt LED source therefore delivers white light that is colored by a classic subtractive CMY system and with mechanical effects that are inserted into the beam.
This, for example, offers a fairly discreet light output, very different from the large and bright pancakes that often disturb the visuals and require complicated systems to manage the unpleasant halos that they generate. Here, though, the beam is 100% controlled and the spurious light outside its beam is virtually zero.

So, what does this fixture look like?

In terms of design, Martin has retained a look quite similar to that of the Quantum, with a fairly flat, rectangular base, the same yoke with finely rounded arms, and a handy second grip on each side. The head is of the same shape, but much less slender, as it conforms to the various internal components of the fixture. It is squat towards the back and tapered towards the nose, giving it the appearance of an artillery piece. In any case, the overall result is particularly effective and balanced.

Led Wash

As on the Quantum Profile, the manufacturer has opted here for a source with a large number of LEDs arranged in an array behind optics that concentrate the luminous flux towards the effects. This LED array is wide and the beam size is good even at the exit of the source module.


Photometric measurements Mac Encore Wash CLD

After a derating that reaches the maximum attenuation of 7% after five minutes of heating, the flux measurements yield quite satisfactory results.
We get a nice, punchy beam, which should be suitable for many applications, even large stages or events that require substantial output.

Here are the measurements of the cold white version, which is reported by the manufacturer to have a CRI >80.

Tight beam.

20° beam.

Wide beam.

The warm white version – with a higher CRI, >90, a TM-30 Rg (IES TM-30-15 Gamut Index) >98 and a TCLI >90 – has a normal decrease in flux of 22%.


The mechanical construction: designed for the user.

The whole fixture is exemplary in terms of simple disassembly and relative ease of maintenance, down to the various ventilation blocks that are mounted on easily removable supports; it is the same for grills, foams… This is an excellent point in favor of the MAC Encore Wash!

Rationally designed chassis.

The no-nonsense base houses the display and its menu access keys on one side and, on the other, two XLR5 DMX connectors, the True-one mains connector, and a USB connector for updating the firmware. That’s it.

The bottom of the fixture with the suspension points.

Two nice, big handles flank the base and, underneath, you can attach the Omega brackets in different positions, as usual.
This base contains, first of all, a general power supply board of the fixture and its motors and, then, a completely separate board that is the power supply for the LED sources.
A motherboard manages the DMX and the software of the MAC Encore, while a separate board manages the zoom/focus module.

The open base and yoke. There are plastic plates that protect the electronics.

While taking it apart, we discover two small plates of flexible plastic, which are positioned above the circuit boards, protecting them from the risks of unintentional contacts. These must be removed to access the boards. They are just pinched in place by two small metal rails.

The arms can be opened up by removing a few screws, revealing the yoke and its mechanical elements. Here we find the pan and tilt motors with all the cabling that passes from the base to the head.
A somewhat unusual fact is that the engines are sort of “hooded” with a small conical cap on the side opposite the shaft end, which is the housing of the position sensor (“Hall effect” sensor system) that is directly fitted on the drive shaft, at the rear of the motor.

The pan motor with Hall effect sensor technology.

For the record, using this system, the fixture always knows exactly where in its range this movement is, no more need to tell the electronics to count the teeth of a gear. This means that you can choose, via the menu and display, that the fixture no longer needs to do a pan-tilt reset in case of a remote reset.
Another important detail regarding the yoke and the drive system is that all the wiring can be disconnected via small connectors, so the tilt belt can be replaced in a few seconds, without any complex procedures involving the cabling that runs through the Y axis of the head.
You will no longer have the fixture with the broken belt (this can happen with any fixture) stuck in its flight case marked with a big gaffer-tape “X”, while awaiting a proper disassembly back at the shop. Well Done!

The head of the beast

The source module and beam output.

Starting at the back, the head contains the source module, which occupies the entire first 1/3 of its volume.
The light passes through an opening about 6 cm in diameter toward the effects.
Here, again, the construction is a little different from what can be found on competing fixtures with massive heat sinks wrapped in heat pipes.
In the Mac Encore Wash, the LED engine is mounted on a heat sink framed with fans for cooling.

The source module, seen from the back.

Grills on each side of the rear of the head provide an opening for air circulation.
The effects are housed in a sort of “sandwich”, that is to say a single thick and compact module, which includes the CMY flags, the color wheel, the shutter blades, as well as a frost filter and iris.
This module is secured by only a few screws and two cable connectors.


The effects/colors/framing module.

The separate components of this module are easily accessible by removing a few more screws.
The CMY system itself can be easily extracted by removing four of them, while a clever set of small tensioners and cylindrical tracks allows the mini belts, which hold the color flags, to be turned individually for their eventual replacement.
Well, you have to be very careful, but it’s within the grasp of any beginner moving-head technician.

Disassembly of the CMY module.

The framing module.

The same applies to the framing module, which can be removed by means of four screws and is fully accessible.
The connectors that link the components in the head to the electronics are designed to be interchangeable, within the limits of the cable tension. No need to make exact markings, if you reverse the connectors, the fixture will recognize the signal that is correct for what it needs to control anyway. That’s nice!


The lenses of the zoom.

In the remaining 1/3 of the head – actually, a very large last third – is the zoom. It consists of a carriage with two sets of lenses that move back and forth.
An important detail is that their positioning is controlled by a small magnetic sensor located on the side of the rail that detects the position of each element.

The zoom position sensors.

This lens system is not removable but very easy to clean, and everything is accessible without even having to twist your hand.

The Fresnel lens with its spiraled steps.

Finally, the Fresnel lens, a beautiful piece of glassware made according to the principle of the stepped lens invented by Augustin Fresnel for lighthouses; here the steps are configured in a spiral.
Martin explains that it is also possible, as an option, to install a plano-convex lens, which provides a different diffusion of the light.

Again, I stress that this is really a unit that, in the event of a problem (which can always happen, given the operating conditions of this type of equipment), will require minimal maintenance time in the workshop. This is a strong point for these fixtures from the perspective of a buyer or user. If you have some parts (and with Martin, we know that when it comes to parts, we can get them very quickly), the unit will be back on the road in minimal time, whatever may happen.

The menu and display

The menu is simple and complete. It includes all the classic options of a fixture of this type.

The menu and display.

We obviously have DMX addressing, the different “personality” modes, the different speed modes for pan/tilt and effects, dimmer curves, a tungsten dimmer curve emulator, four different ventilation modes to manage fixture noise (with some of these affecting the luminous output, of course!), temperature information for all the modules, the sources, calibration, test sequences, manual control for each parameter, etc. In short, it is ALL there.

Some nice little options.

  • The possibility to activate a “hybrid” standby mode which can then be controlled from the console to remotely shut down any activity (useful for certain fixed installations where the fixtures may be permanently powered, but left “in standby” for certain extended periods).
  • The “fan clean” function, which throws all the impellers all the way to their maximum (with a thunderous noise), allowing you to clean up fans that are half clogged with dust, or other dirt embedded in the LED board, for example. Of course, this doesn’t clean the fixture, but it can be used to remove it before a major cleaning in the workshop. Since there is no air circulation in the head, there is no risk of clogging the modules.
  • The option “pan-tilt feedback”, which ensures that the fixture doesn’t go back and forth in case of a reset (it doesn’t move).

Let’s play with this beautiful machine!

The MAC Encore Wash is controlled via 26 DMX channels. One more good thing! I like it when it doesn’t take an hour to figure out how to configure the fixture, with twelve modes that no one uses (just to re-do the patches every five minutes…). One mode… one simple and rational control mode, it’s got EVERYTHING, and it works. Again, well done. Voilà. Let the other manufacturers take this to heart, please….

Tight zoom and wide zoom.

We turned on the two MAC Encore Washes side by side. The cold and the warm. Let’s take a look! And it also gives us useful insights into their use and differences (besides the color temperature, of course).
The beam is very nice. It is generous and very flexible. The zoom is fast, it opens wide, it tightens well, nice! An iris completes the closure capabilities of the beam, at the cost of a certain number of lux, as expected.
For the time being, I don’t know many LED washes whose light properties are so flexible in this power category. With the CLD model, we feel like we just have a nice big beam machine and we’re not worried at all about any color compromises we have to make.

The beams in a tight zoom and wide open.

As for the WRM model, we have the impression of a traditional luminaire with no limitations and with which we can do what we want from the console, without having to ask a technician to go and tinker with it at the top of a tower or a cherry picker (and for the moment, we can make him do lots of other things during the show!)…

A few different aspects of the beam.

Seen in backlight, the fixture’s light output is elegant. When seen as a frontal or from any other angle, you don’t get any spurious light around the projector; it doesn’t shine from everywhere and that’s really good!
The smoothness of the dimmer is very good, even at the lowest settings. It’s great. And in tungsten emulation mode, you’d believe it was real! This false filament doesn’t cut out when you make a sudden blackout.

The Dimmer curve from 0 to 100% in Square Law mode.

A close-up on the lowest percentages of the dimmer curve, from 0 to 10%.


When it comes to colors, it’s also really good. Not surprisingly, the warm colors are absolutely exceptional on the WRM version, but not only. Even the cold colors are nice and don’t lack character. The only exception that comes to mind is the congo blue, of course (which is quite typical), but also the CTB, which absorbs a lot of light but is still very usable! I’m splitting hairs, here, though.

The primary colors CMY+CTO/CTB. The CLD model above, the WRM model below.

The white beams, then with the individual CMY filters.

The added color wheel can be precisely positioned, with split colors as desired over one range of parameter values, while another range automatically selects solid colors. A third range deals with continuous rotations at different speeds of this color wheel (for disco, for psychedelia. Wow!).

The beams with mixed hues.

The framing shutters are very useful on this type of fixture for carrying out precise lighting work. Habitual users of profiles with all kinds of filters – if they make the effort to try this kind of modern tool – will find a fixture that is extremely valuable for modeling a fine light however they like it.

The framing shutters in action.

I’m about to spew my usual old drivel, but this wash is not just for making a blue/red or yellow layer between beams that spin in a “circle” in the smoke… We’re dealing with a precision tool here.
The frost can further soften the beam, if necessary, allowing for perfect overlapping between the fixtures or to soften the impacts or splashes of light.

Conclusion

Here we have a very attractive fixture which, while not revolutionary in its features, is outstanding in its construction in many respects, and takes full advantage of LED technology. It is the essence of what a lighting designer expects and, during the creation and programming phase, he will obtain everything he wants from this effective, versatile and precise tool.
It is a luminaire with very few peers, which should quickly become popular with demanding lighting designers in the entertainment and theatre industries. This is an instrument that is at odds with the philosophy of practical compromises that dominates the event and entertainment market.

  • the malleability of the light,
  • the ease of maintenance,
  • the colors,
  • the dimmer.
  • I’m still searching.

  • More information on the Martin Professional website

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    L-Acoustics at NAMM 2019

    NAMM has always been the place where the music world meets and has now also demonstrated its ongoing commitment to professional sound. L-Acoustics returned to the trade show as an exhibitor last year in Anaheim and is pleased to do so again in 2019.

    Scott Sugden, L-Acoustics Product manager for U.S.A. and Canada in the middle of a L-ISA demo.

    L-Acoustics will more than double its booth area this year, to make sure to welcome all the visitors in the best possible conditions to know more about the Immersive Sound System L-ISA. To achieve this, room 203A will be dedicated to demos, with free entrance.

    • Thursday, January 24th: 11:00, 13:00, 15:00 & 17:00
    • Friday, January 25th: 10:00, 12:00, 14:00 & 16:00
    • Saturday, January 26th: 11:00, 13:00, 15:00 & 17:00
    • Sunday, January 27th: 10:00, 12:00 & 14:00

    Let’s notice, too, that the L-ISA system is nominated this year in the Creative Harware category for NAMM TEC Awards, and that the L-Acoustics team will stream the event online.

    Syva, the versatile and most effective speaker, even for immersive sound thanks to its large horizontal coverage specs.

    The L-Acoustics interactive showroom will be populated by the latest loudspeakers, processors, and software including ARCS Wide, ARCS Focus, X Series, K Series, and Syva loudspeakers, along with the P1 AVB processor which began shipping in June 2018.

    “The January timing in our annual events calendar, in addition to NAMM’s location not far from our US headquarters in Westlake Village, make this show a great way to kick off our year.” declares Laurent Vaissié, CEO, USA & Canada for L-Acoustics.

    Laurent Vaissié.

    “The combination of technology showcases, education opportunities, and exciting awards ceremonies make NAMM a great place to reconnect with peers and key clients, as well as reaching the broader audience of music enthusiasts who help our industry thrive.”

    Meet the L-Acoustics team at NAMM until Jan. 27th on their 17208 booth and discover L-ISA and the other technologies in room 203A.

    More info the L-Acoustics website.

    A huge L-ISA Focus for french singer/dancer Chris at the AccorHotels Arena in Paris. Full report soon to come, stay tuned to SoundLightUp.com.

     

    Brompton Technology TESSERA training sessions off to a flying start

    Brompton Technology’s recently initiated training programme is designed for anyone interested in learning more about the extensive capabilities of the company’s TESSERA LED processing for its T1, S4, M2 and SX40 LED processors and the XD data distribution units. Free to technicians working in the LED screen sector, they are already proving highly popular, with 18 attendees going through the Brompton doors since the first session on 15th November 2018.

    Held at Brompton’s HQ in Ealing, London, the sessions take attendees through the fundamentals of operating its state-of-the-art LED processors, familiarising them with the easy-to-use interface and giving them hands on experience with handy features such as ChromaTune colour correction, On Screen Colour Adjustment (OSCA), Dark Magic for colour smoothing in low brightness conditions, Fixture Processing and Genlock.


    Attendees will also get first-hand experience of the new Tessera Processor Software 2.2.0 for the 4K SX40 processor which delivers an enhanced feature set, including:

    • Panel On Screen Display (OSD),
    • Processor Redundancy,
    • 90 degree rotation,
    • and Chinese language support in the user interface.

    Easy to get to grips with

    “Our processors are incredibly easy to get to grips with,” says Brompton’s Technical Support Manager, Adam Callaway. “In fact, anyone can be up and running in a matter of minutes. They are also very powerful and, with our 2.2.0 software we have introduced significant new features that give even more control of the screen to the user, so as well as going through the basics, our training sessions provide technicians with additional knowledge and some handy tips and shortcuts to make life even easier.”

    Because Brompton processors can do so much, it’s easy to think they’ll be complicated,” says Neil Waller (LED Operations Manager) from Creative Technology London, who attended one of the sessions in December. “It really does only take a very short amount of time to understand how to use them, but getting a more in-depth view has made me realise just how many advantages the system has.
    Take for instance the quick and easy way the screen can be addressed to Dark Magic, which allows you to enhance the quality of an image, even at lower brightness levels, to Panel OSD, a function I know I’m going to find really useful, which makes it incredibly easy to identify issues on any part of the screen just by looking at information displayed on the panels themselves.”

    The next series of sessions will take place during March and the following months, stay tuned:

    March:
    Wednesday 20th March 2019
    Thursday 21st March 2019

    …and more dates to come!


    For more information, or to book your place on these sessions, and also express interest in sessions in other areas of the world, email [email protected]

     

    Nexo launches at NAMM new M12 as GEO M series flagship, with MSUB18 subwoofer

    New implementation at the upper end of the GEO M range, the M12 provides the ability to cover large areas with a versatile, lightweight, powerful and affordable product. Same size and equipped with a single 18” speaker, the MSUB18 complements the Nexo offering.

    The GEO M12 video presentation by Joseph Carcopino :

    Following the successful S12, having sold more than 30,000 units, the M12 sets the tone by delivering 3 dB SPL more than its predecessor and 4 more than the M10, while dropping the wood of the former GEOs for injected Composite Low Density – Polyurethane, more resistant, durable and adaptable to complex shapes.

    Big advantage of an injected polyurethane shell, a few screws are enough to give access to the transducers. Notice the inscription on the GEO M1220 guide, as well as the huge vent. The two wings on either side of the driver are used to block it in the other half-hull also housing the passive filter. Two small fleece pads and the 12” driver complete the M12.

    In detail, the new 12” gains for example 30% in terms of excursion and cooling compared to the (already very good) low transducer of the S12 and keeps the phasing PDD part which gives it a small size transducers behavior and coupling with the treble driver, without sacrificing the extension in the low frequencies characterizing a 12” speaker. The completely redesigned vent, taking advantage of the advances previously undergone in the STM range, allows for a quieter air flow but also a higher bass output level.

    The M1220 waveguide, as easily accessible as the 12” once the metal protection you can guess hanging on the right hand side from a small steel sling is taken off. The silver pellets on the front panel are nothing but very effective little neodymium magnets, some holding the grille, some the magnetic flange that comes clipping in front of the guide.

    The 3” voice coil, 1.4” throat Neodymium HF driver is built according the HRW patent and, thanks to Nexo’s advances in F.E.M. (Finite Element Method), the waveguide gains precision and control with a choice of two vertical directivities, 10° or 20° (hence the M1210 et M1220 model references), but the horizontal directivity can vary as well from the nominal 80° to 120° in one click, once the front face is open, all easily and quickly done.

    Le M12 is equipped with a passive filter set at 1.1 kHz, but it can be set to active mode by pushing a recessed switch on the back panel. The amplification can be supplied either by a NXAMP4x4 loaded with 3 M12 in passive mode per amp channel (nominal impedance of 8 ohms in passive mode), or in active mode, still with 3 M12 per channel (LF impedance 8 ohms and HF 16 ohms).

    The rear face of an M1220 with (left to right) the switch between active or passive mode, the angle adjustment and rigging points, very massive, with all loose parts captive, and finally the pair of Speakon in/thru connectors. You can guess below right the Autorig lock.

    It is possible to use the NXAMP4x2 mkII, but only with one enclosure per channel, and even the NXAMP4x1, but in bridge mode with 2 channels for one M12, so let’s assume the NXAMP4x4 is the adequate and recommended companion.
    The maximum power in passive mode is 1,250 W, and in active mode 1,250 + 650 W. Finally the SPL Max reaches 140 dB with a 50 Hz – 20 kHz bandwith (-6 dB).

    A very classic but effective combination consisting of two MSUB18 and three M1220. We can guess the 18 ” in the two sub cabinets. The whole right side of each of them is merely a very big vent. As it should, each sub has connectors wired in parallel on the front panel to ease cardioid cabling.

    The rigging is very intuitive and fast, and relies on an automatic system called AutoRig. 12 boxes or 8 subs can be hung on one Touring Frame, with 7 angles adjusted from the back without any loose part. There is of course an Installation version in addition to the Touring one, with simplified rigging and a wide choice of RAL colors, and a bonus IP54 rating.

    The sub coming with this new system is named MSUB18 and, thanks to the internal positioning of the 18-inch transducer slightly angled in a hybrid arrangement between bass reflex and bandpass, it has all the air it needs and can be hung on top of a line array, as its width is the same as of the M12, i.e. 70 centimeters. Weighing 55 kg and existing with or without Touring fittings to be permanently installed in a venue, it is made of Baltic birch ply.

    Taking up to 2,000 Watts @ 4 ohms, the transducer, with very long excursion and of course neodymium magnet, is none other than the one present in the STM range, so we find its same vitality here with a sensitivity of 107 dB and a Max SPL of 139 dB!
    The very large vent allows it to give all its energy on a relatively wide spectrum, considering that its response in nominal frequency response @ -6 dB ranges is 32 to 120 Hz.

    Two Touring Bumpers, which can be used at the same time to hang mixed lines of cabinets or to provide the junction between MSUB18 and M12 models.

    It is possible to filter it, either in “infra” mode to boost the first octave from 29 to 65 Hz, or gradually extend its bandwith to handle the 29 to 120 Hz range.
    5 choices are possible. The NXAMP4x4 controller accepts 2 MSUB18 per channel in parallel, the NXAMP4x2 only one and the NXAMP4x1 one, on two channels in bridged mode.

    An important number of accessories comes with the launch of this new system, giving it all the versatility required, either rigged in Touring version, stacked the ground, or finally in a fixed installation version.

    We had the opportunity to ask some questions to Joseph Carcopino, Nexo’s Head of R&D, the ideal guy to define precisely what a product is.

    SLU : What sets the STM apart from the M12 while designing a system ?

    Joseph Carcopino : The distinction between an enclosure of the STM series and GEO M, is simply by what I’d call the density of power.
    In a given volume, we place more transducers in the STM (I think for example of the two 2.5” drivers inside the M28) than in the GEO M, where there is only one 3” driver, and the STM M28 is lower than the M12, but in a line-array it is that ratio that will give you either the power or the long throw. But some STM technologies are being used in the M12, such as the vent, the flanges or the work done on the waveguide and cabinet manufacturing.

    SLU : So, the difference is in the number more than the quality of the transducers?

    Joseph Carcopino

    Joseph Carcopino : Yes. Especially since in both cases they are excellent transducers.

    SLU : You have to switch between big and small systems so that ideas can flow from one to the other?

    Joseph Carcopino : Exactly. We must alternate between technological innovation and industrial innovation. Today we are transferring technologies still reserved a few years ago to a high-end product range with greater diffusion and the other way around, because industrial advances will reflect positively later, which could in the end lower the price of some of the components inside some future big system.

    SLU : Will you go more for molding in the long run?

    Joseph Carcopino : We have the chance to master this technology because, if I may say, we mold “at home”, but we also have a very good carpentry department and I do not think that one technology is better than the other. Polyurethane has a very good resistance in time and under difficult atmospheric conditions, on the other hand for stage monitors or other more specific speakers like sub cabinets, the wood keeps all its interest.

    The 12” transducer and the DPP ensuring the phasing and the best alignment between the bass speaker and the hi freq. driver. The foam glued on it guarantees the absence of vibrations with the front grid at high power. The vent design is quite like its size: impressive.

    SLU : What is the positioning of the MSUB18. SPL, Infra, higher bandwith?

    Joseph Carcopino : It is designed on purpose as compact with single 18 ” and is expected to be flown which will allow to comply more easily with the new French Noise Limitations standards by limiting the SPL level nearby. In addition, the theaters do not like the subs on the ground.
    To hang it, on the other hand, you have to have a very good efficiency because you lose the ground coupling effect, and to achieve that, you just build an array to tighten the radiation pattern that can be “pulled down” electronically in the NXAMP.

    SLU : The load design in the sub seems simpler than the usual Nexo.

    Joseph Carcopino : Absolutely. We’ve been looking for efficiency and impact, so we’re very close to a bass reflex. We wanted to be effective up to the top of the sub bandwith to better handle its energy between 100 and 120 Hz, which is not pleasant when stacked on the ground, but very useful when flown. it is also tuned low, and with its very large vent it can also make your pants fluffer!

    A stacking ratio recommended by the manufacturer: 2 subs for 6 M12 in the blue sky of Plailly, France.

    SLU : The active / passive difference in the M12 is paying its dues in terms of amp channels, but what of dB extra gain?

    Joseph Carcopino : We are lucky to have very powerful amps in our range, so everything goes well even in passive mode, but in active mode we can deliver three more dBs, measured and effective, which allows us to go tickling the big systems.

    SLU : Is the M12 in the pipeline in EN54 version, to be able to be installed in stadiums, for example?

    Joseph Carcopino : It is launched in Touring and Installation modes, this last version comes with a cable gland instead of chassis connectors, a special fabric on the front grille and a simplified rigging, which makes it even more economical without losing its acoustic qualities.
    It is certain that we will target the stadiums with this model, especially as the plastic lasts longer than wood, but it is not expected to work an EN54 version for this speaker. The S12 remains our preferred solution to offer the Comfort / Evac versatility.

    SLU : What are the availability dates of the M12, its presets and its sub?

    Joseph Carcopino : From January 24th on, and we already have a very nice stock (laughs) The preset is done and we love what we hear, but we will make it evolve with the feedback from the first users and adjust it accordingly.

    SLU : Phase compatible ?

    Joseph Carcopino : Of course. Like all Nexo products, it is possible to mix any product in the range. Everything will be perfectly in phase.

    SLU : What are the competitors of the M10 and M12?

    Joseph Carcopino : Typically 2 x 6” models for the M10 and 2 x 8” models for the M12, and there are loads of them on the market (laughs). But there are many arguments in favor of one 12” that brings more low extension in the bass frequencies than two 8”, not to mention the versatility brought up by the different possible coverage angles!

    Part of the team that worked on the M12 and the MSUB18. From left to right : Eric Ecosse, Mechanical engineer, Nexo R&D (GEOM12), Maxime Bru, Signal Processing Engineer, Nexo R&D, Christophe Givre, Mechanical engineer R& D Nexo (MSUB18), Franck Barreau, Firmware Engineer, Nexo R&D, Maxime Grimonet, Software Engineer, Nexo R&D, Benoît Mouflin, Firmware Engineer, Nexo R&D, Joseph Carcopino, Nexo R&D Manager, Carole Marsaud, Application Engineer, Nexo Engineering Support, Didier Isambard, Design Engineer, Standards and Technical Documentation, Nexo R&D, Florian Eustache, Marketing Assistant, Nexo Marketing Department, François Deffarges, Nexo Engineering Support Manager, Robin Shamsnejad, Application Engineer, Nexo Engineering Support.

    We unfortunately couldn’t listen to the M12 during this report, but we’ll certainly do so in the forthcoming weeks, and then add another in-depth chapter to this first presentation.

    For more information, click here.