i have four architectural speakers that i am planning to hang them facing down from the ceiling - on the rafters of this covered patio. there will be 4 speakers for a total coverage of 330 sq ft (rectangular 12ft x 33 ft ) sized patio. Is this a good orientation for these speakers ?
Answered
Architectura speaker - orientation
Best answer by tracker
- Yep,
@melvimbe is right: 3 pair of speakers are allowed per Amp, if they are the Sonos/Sonance co-branded ones. I don’t think I would try more than 2 pair of most normal speakers, the combined impedance would get too low. (It makes one wonder if the Amp is doing some kind of adaptive bass throttling if it knows or can count how many of its own-brand speakers are attached. Or maybe it always has ABL running but we usually don’t notice because it doesn’t kick in?) [Edit crossing posts; Connect:Amp, not new Amp, gotcha.] - I respectfully disagree with
@AjTrek1 that 4 speakers is too many: Sure, if you turn them all up, the neighbors may complain -- but the point of having 4 instead of 2 is to allow a lower volume setting and more even coverage rather than shouting at people nearby, in order to be heard at all, out at the edge of the patio. -
@melvimbe is also right that a typical pro installation of garden speakers will have several small “spotlight” speakers pointed back at the house, either in an even blanket or at specific areas around the patio, so forget my idea about soffit-mounting and angling out. But pointing your larger outdoor speakers down at the floor as you intended is a perfectly fine way to prevent the sound from being directed to the neighbors. (Besides, it’s much easier to pull/hide wire over the rafters than make multiple holes through the siding. The denser your crowd, the less the reflection from the floor too!-) - A typical pro installation of overhead restaurant or bar speakers will do one more trick that you might consider, but only afterwards, if you don’t like the coverage you get from 4 speakers @12’H. or you get weird effects from sound bouncing off the roof (which must be pretty close to the rafters): Attach down-rods to put the speakers 3 feet closer to the ears. They look like ceiling fan extension rods. Go into any chain restaurant that has been “installed” into generic open high-ceiling shopping mall space or outbuilding and you’ll see what it’s like.
- I imagined that the space behind that column on the left (is there a fireplace on the other side, or is it just a storage closet?) will be served with sound by the interior rooms if the patio is in use, so no reason to change from your planned overhead coverage, unless you’re going to have special uses for the two areas. Even if not, the idea that there is some “escape” from the sound system still appeals to me.
- Finally, and definitely off topic,
@maxpayne your photo shows a gray stain on that column. Maybe you simply had a barbecue grill outside there since the house was built. But if not, you might want to check for water infiltration or a firebox backside too close to the sheathing, or *something* responsible.
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