Danley Sound Labs SM80F, Nanos Simplify Audio At Oakbook Prep

SPARTANBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA: Rosemary Moore founded the Christian-based, K-12 Oakbrook Preparatory School in Spartanburg, South Carolina 25 years ago in the model of Charlotte Mason’s English Village School concept, which focuses on inspiring students’ innate curiosity with challenging questions and ideas. The school emphasizes performance arts and team sports, both of which make extensive use of the school’s multipurpose gym. In addition, Hope Point Church uses the school’s multipurpose gym for its Sunday service. For years, both the school and the church put up with the gym’s inarticulate sound reinforcement, but that’s resolved now. Gattis Pro Audio of Lexington, South Carolina, recently installed a stereo pair of Danley Sound Labs SM80F full-range loudspeakers with built-in low-end support, along with three tiny, but surprisingly impactful, and articulate Danley Nanos for monitoring.

“They had some good speakers in there, but this wasn’t the right application for them,” explained Sid Gattis, owner of Gattis Pro Audio. “They weren’t designed to throw as far as they were required to and there was little to no processing to help things out. Everything sounded mushy and poorly defined. The church hauled in their own monitors on Sunday, and the school didn’t even have monitors. Everyone involved wanted something that would be much, much better.” Danley’s new SM80F had been on Gattis’ radar since he heard it at a recent trade show, and he knew it had the pattern control, articulation, and low-end response that would be perfect for Oakbrook Prep.

The main system is almost as simple as it could possibly be: a true stereo pair of Danley SM80F loudspeakers hang above the stage and cover the entire floor. The SM80F combines Danley’s patented Synergy Horn technology, which delivers phase-coherent low-mid to high-end content, and Danley’s patented Tapped Horn technology, which delivers undistorted, musical low end. A small existing QSC loudspeaker provides twenty feet of fill just in front of the stage. “Those two Danley boxes provide a ton of clean output,” Gattis said. “While we were commissioning the system – long after school had let out – we really cranked the system up to see what it could do. There was a heavy vinyl curtain basketball court divider, and we had the corners of it flapping in the wind from the SM80Fs! That’s some intense low-end energy!”

A new Behringer x32 Rack mixing system allows the school to mix from an iPad anywhere in the gym. A new QSC Q-Sys DSP system provides input conditioning and modest loudspeaker conditioning, along with two simple input selection presets: one for the school and one for the church. Crown XTi 2002 and 6002 amplifiers power the system. “Danley’s real pattern control keeps energy focused on the people and off the walls,” Gattis said. “The top end on the SM80F is coax, and normally I think of coax as a poor choice for long-throw applications. But not Danley! The SM80Fs throw to the back of the room and the vocals sparkle no matter where you sit in the room.”

Gattis installed three small Danley Nanos into the busy proscenium for the school’s monitoring. The Nano uses just one 3-inch driver inside a 6-inch cube housing. “It was a real ‘wow’ moment,” Gattis said. “Those Nanos are ridiculous! They sound so good! There’s no low end and nothing bone crushing or crazy, but the voice range is so articulate and silky. When the school heard the monitoring on stage, they were at first confused about where it was even coming from!”

ABOUT DANLEY SOUND LABS Danley Sound Labs is the exclusive home of Tom Danley, one of the most innovative loudspeaker designers in the industry today and recognized worldwide as a pioneer for "outside the box" thinking in professional audio technology.

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