Horsham,
Pennsylvania: Bauder Audio Systems, Inc recently
took delivery of a new 48-box Aspect®
system, just in time to use it at the Cape May Jazz
Festival and then on to commencement ceremonies at
Temple University in Philadelphia.
The 24 pairs of new Aspect TA-890H mid-high and TA-890L
subwoofer speakers join Bauder Audio's existing Turbosound
Floodlight system. "We're running Floodlight
and Aspect systems concurrently," says company
owner Rick Bauder. "We have 108 boxes between
them. When we purchased the Aspect system we built
all new amp racks, new flyware, everything. It's a
standalone system, which allows us to be more flexible."
The ability to rotate the horns in the TA-890H boxes
was an important factor in the purchase decision,
according to Bauder. "If you buy the touring
version, which we did, you can stand the box up or
lay it down. If you stand the boxes vertically, they
take up a very small footprint," he explains.
Also critical were the tightly focused 25-degree
dispersion characteristics of the box. "We felt
that the point source system would cover more of the
places that we work throughout the year than a line
array. Aspect is like a laser beam; where you point
it is where it goes," explains Bauder. "You
put in two or three of those per side and you're getting
50- or 75-degree coverage - period." Compare
that to a traditional line array, he says: "A
line array is 90 to 140 degrees wide, and you have
no control. It's going to be bouncing off the sidewalls
and putting sound where nobody is sitting. It ruins
the stereo imaging."
Furthermore, says Bauder, "It'll throw tremendous
distances, which was important. Aspect is right where
you want it even at 300 or 400 feet. That makes it
more valuable. And we don't have to fly delays or
put up scaffolding, so the audience is not cheated
towards the back of the facility."
Bauder Audio services the Cape May Jazz Festival
twice a year, in May and November. ""We
put eight systems and 14 technicians into eight venues
for the three-day festival. The key is to have speaker
systems that package into small nightclub environments.
You pick what fits the venue. In the larger venues,
like the convention hall, we would typically use Aspect."
Bauder Audio has been using Turbosound for almost
20 years, reports Bauder, who established the company,
near Philadelphia, in 1980. That first rig was purchased
from Bauder's longtime friend and Turbosound dealer,
Carl Taylor, of Crystal Taylor Productions. The company
has continued to acquire Turbosound equipment as it
has become available, and now holds an extensive inventory
of Floodlight, QLight™, TXD and TMS systems
that allows the company to handle venues from 1,200
seats to 12,000.
The upgrade to Turbosound's next-generation Aspect
virtual point source speakers came after extensive
real world trials, according to Bauder. "We made
this purchase very slowly, over about six months.
Sennheiser was nice enough to lend us a demo rig,
which we were able to use in real life situations,
not just play with it in the warehouse."
"Turbosound sent us eight of the 880H and eight
880L boxes," recalls Bauder Audio production
manager Brian Naab, who initially flew to the NAMM
Show to see the system. "We used those in a variety
of applications over the course of two or three months.
We did outdoor venues, where we supplemented those
boxes with some of Turbosound 21-inch subs, and we
did a lot of theater work. Everyone was impressed
enough with it that Paul Giansante [Sennheiser's Turbosound
product manager] flew to Philly and put a nice package
together for us. Aspect really has exceeded our expectations
in every application so far."
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