Stony Point Reformed Presbyterian Church in the Bon Air suburb of Richmond, Virginia
USA - Five dedicated families founded Stony Point Reformed Presbyterian Church in the Bon Air suburb of Richmond, Virginia in 1969. A big part of its steady growth and support has been its strong commitment to motivating and punctuating services with music in an ever-changing variety of contemporary and classical styles.

In short, music is a big deal at Stony Point. Different bands play each week with a lot of reliance on the congregation's many musically talented individuals. When the church built a new 500-seat sanctuary, everyone wanted a new sound reinforcement system that could help elevate the impact and emotion of its services. In consultation with the Richmond-based AV integration firm RTW Media, Stony Point installed a robust LCR system composed of Danley Sound Labs loudspeakers, subwoofers, and DSP-enabled amplifiers.

"Despite all the incredible musical talent at Stony Point, the old sanctuary had less-than-ideal sound reinforcement in a challenging acoustical environment," explained Ross Milby, who has volunteered as Stony Point's FOH engineer for over a decade. Milby worked with RTW Media on the design and installation of Stony Point's new sound reinforcement system. "RTW's Logan Hinnant, who interfaced with the church and architect, was incredibly helpful in navigating us through the design process." The experience was so great for both parties that Milby joined RTW Media's team as a regional accounts manager.

"Not only did we need excellent sound reinforcement for our music, but we also needed it for clarity of spoken word," Milby continued. "The local Danley rep, Tom Macri, and Danley's East Coast manager, Skip Welch, coordinated a demonstration of a small Danley system at our old church for a demo, and its clarity, intelligibility, and musicality immediately jumped out. RTW took it a step further, inviting our church to InfoComm in Florida to get side-by-side comparisons to other speaker manufactures. RTW's Zack Guida guided me through every audio demo room, and sure enough, Danley's performance was unmatched. The ability to custom paint the speaker cabinets was simply icing on the cake, because we could have superior performance while perfectly meshing with the aesthetics in the new sanctuary."

Stony Point went with an LCR system so that Milby could mix vocals and spoken word to the center channel and spread out the musical instruments between the left and right loudspeakers for maximum clarity. Three point-source Danley SH-69 loudspeakers comprise the LCR system, with low-end support from a single Danley TH-118 subwoofer underneath the stage.

"I was sceptical that a single TH-118 could provide enough low end for the size of our new sanctuary," said Milby. "But I was blown away. It sounds great." Just a pair of two-channel Danley DLA 7500 amplifiers powers the system, with loudspeaker conditioning supplied by optional on-board DSP. A Midas Pro 1 digital mixer provides user control for the system, and two portable Midas DL153 stage boxes connect the system to stage left and stage right.

(Jim Evans)


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