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A look at one of the new L-Acoustics A15i/KS21i array pairings at the Key Yeager Coliseum in Wichita Falls, TX.

Kay Yeager Coliseum In Texas Puts L-Acoustics Into The Ring

LD Systems designs and installs new system headed up by A Series loudspeakers working with KS21i subwoofers to serve a wide range of events hosted by multipurpose arena that can accommodate audiences up to 10,000.

Kay Yeager Coliseum in Wichita Falls, TX, which first opened in 2003 and seats as many as 10,000 for events ranging from the local Flyers FC of the US Arena Pro Soccer League to concerts, trade shows, conventions, hockey, basketball, arena football, Professional Bull Riding, tractor pulls, and more, was recently eqipped with a new sound reinforcement system headed by L-Acoustics A Series loudspeakers in a project by Houston-based LD Systems.

“Venue managers talk to each other all the time, about everything,” says Clay Stockton, assistant general manager for the City of Wichita Falls’ Multi-Purpose Events Center (MPEC), which includes the Kay Yeager Coliseum. “We talk about shows, we talk about technology. A colleague at another Texas venue told me about the L-Acoustics A Series sound system, and I’m glad we talked, because it’s been quite an amazing transformation.

“The sound was unlike anything I’d heard before,” he continues. “Since the A Series went in, we’ve had the Harlem Globetrotters here, boys and girls high school basketball games of the University Interscholastic League, and a Christian-music concert. For every event, people who had heard the previous sound system noted the huge improvement in sound quality now. Everyone just loves it!”

The new system, designed with input from the L-Acoustics Application team and replacing the venue’s original system, utilizes a distributed design, primarily comprising four-enclosure arrays of A15i and a pair of two-enclosure hangs in the end zones — a mixture of Wide and Focus, as needed in each location –backed by a dozen KS21i subwoofers. These are supplemented by six coaxial X8 and two X12 used as a fills for shadowed areas. A combination of ten LA4X and two LA12X amplified controllers drive the entire setup.

“The room sounded pretty good on its own; the A15i speakers, though, were able to make it sound even better by making sure were able to provide coverage for every seat no matter what seating configuration they were using,” explains LD Systems engineering manager Anthony DiDonato. He notes that there were some rigging challenges in spots, but that A15i’s light weight and compact form factor easily overcame those.

DiDonato adds that municipal venues like the city-owned MPEC are now joining private ones in seeking higher impact and improved speech intelligibility from their sound systems: “The number-one complaint about the previous system was that the clarity of spoken word just wasn’t there for events such as graduations. The A15i system addressed both of those issues, offering impactful sound with great low-frequency reproduction for music, and excellent clarity for speech, to get fans involved for sports and make every word crystal-clear. A15i does it all.”

He notes that the integration of a QSC Q-SYS control system allows the venue to turn loudspeaker clusters on and off, as events’ acoustical and seating needs change, keeping sound where it’s wanted and away from where it’s not, avoiding undesired reflections and reverberation. “It can also drive an auto-mixer when they don’t need to fire up the Allen & Heath SQ-5 front-of-house console,” he notes. “It’s a highly flexible system that gets them exactly what they need and at an affordable cost. That’s one in the ‘win’ column.”

L-Acoustics
LD Systems

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