Antioch Baptist Church, located about 16 miles southeast of Montgomery, Ala., has been through many changes since its founding 200 years ago. The congregation moved from its original site to its present home in 1919, and the church has been renovated several times since, most recently in 1999, when the current sanctuary was constructed.
For years, the church got by with a sound system consisting of three aging loudspeakers spread along each side of the sanctuary and two front-facing fills in the rear of the room, with no offset delays or other processing. Unsurprisingly, the result was low intelligibility and generally poor sound. To address these issues, church leaders contacted Prattville, Ala., AV systems integrators Moffitt Technology. After assessing the space, Moffitt AV Services recommended a new system based on Renkus-Heinz Iconyx IC Live digitally steerable arrays.
"The sanctuary is roughly fan shaped, angling from the front to the back at about 20 degrees," Moffitt Technology Lead Technician Jeff Allen reports. "The old sound system wasn't what they needed but the acoustics are not bad. The only thing we thought might give us trouble was the facing of the rear balcony. But with Renkus-Heinz beam steering, we were able to steer and tune the speakers to where we had hardly any bounce off the balcony."
Moffitt was sold on Renkus-Heinz IC Live before the Antioch Baptist Church project, although the firm had limited hands-on experience with Renkus-Heinz loudspeakers. "We redid an auditorium at an Air Force base downtown, and Renkus-Heinz IC Live was spec'd in," Allen recalls. "When I heard that system, I fell in love with it. It just sounded awesome! Then I got Richard Hembree of Griffith Sales to come down and demo Renkus-Heinz IC Live for a couple of churches, and it sounded so much better than what they had that I kept IC Live in mind."
In making their recommendations, Moffitt considered the type of services at Antioch Baptist Church, as well as the acoustics. "Their services use choir and organ but also keyboards and drums, so the sound system needs enough clean power for music reinforcement, as well as speech," Allen relates. "The sanctuary doesn't have acoustic conditioning, and it has that balcony, so beam steering to direct the sound to the people and away from reflective surfaces makes the difference. I knew IC Live was what they needed."
The Moffitt Technology team worked with church leaders for a year before installing the new sound system. For the main arrays, Moffitt chose a pair of Dante-enabled Renkus-Heinz IC-FR-DUAL loudspeakers, from the IC Live Gen5 series, matching the arrays with two Renkus-Heinz CFX18S 18-inch high-performance subwoofers. Two Renkus-Heinz CX41 compact, four-inch, coaxial two-way loudspeakers, mounted beneath the arrays, serve as front down fills. The Moffitt team also installed a pair of CX42 compact high-performance two-way stair step speakers. For onstage floor wedges, Moffitt specified two Renkus-Heinz CFX121M two-way Complex Conic loudspeakers.
A Lab.gruppen D80:4 amplifier processes and powers the Renkus-Heinz subwoofers, down fills, stair step speakers, and floor wedges and serves as a Dante "on ramp" for the self-powered IC-FR-DUAL main arrays. The Moffitt team chose a Dante-enabled Biamp Tesira-series DSP to manage the system, and the church continues to use its existing analog console.
"Moffitt did a great job," praises Antioch Baptist Church Deacon and Minister of Music John Gibbs. "They were very professional and got it accomplished in a short period of time. The Moffitt staff were very pleasant to work with, and everyone at the church is very pleased with the system that was installed".