PA Speaker Placement Calculator for Live Sound

PA Speaker Placement Calculator

Plan main speaker aiming, listener coverage, delay zone timing, cabinet spacing, and sub-main alignment before you tune the system in the room.

🎤 Venue Presets

Pick a venue shape to load realistic starting values. Every field remains editable, and final timing should still be verified with measurement, listening, and safe rigging practice.

Room, Coverage, And Timing Inputs
Converts room, height, and distance fields.
Wall-to-wall audience room width.
Stage lip to back of audience area.
First useful listening row from the stage.
Farthest planned listener position.
Usable seated or standing audience width.
Acoustic center height of the main cabinets.
Use 3.5 ft seated or 4.5 ft standing.
Distance between left and right acoustic centers.
Nominal horizontal pattern of one main speaker.
Nominal vertical pattern used for trim advice.
Degrees downward from level toward the audience.
Degrees inward from straight ahead.
Distance from stage to delay speaker line.
Where the delay fill and mains are aligned.
Added delay so the mains remain the image anchor.
Measurement distance from sub to alignment mic.
Measurement distance from main to same mic point.
Used for wavelength and phase offset estimates.
Fahrenheit in imperial mode, Celsius in metric mode.
Practical starting level below the mains.

The calculator estimates geometry and time-of-flight. Final deployment must consider speaker manufacturer coverage data, ceiling height, sight lines, rigging limits, and measured impulse response.

Main Aim Point
0 ft
vertical target distance
Rear Coverage Width
0 ft
estimated per-side spread
Delay Zone Timing
0 ms
fill delay with precedence offset
Sub/Main Alignment
0 ms
delay the closer source
📊 Placement Spec Grid
64 ft

Audience throw

9.0 dB

Front to rear loss

1.13

Sound speed ft/ms

12.6 ft

Crossover wavelength

🏛 Common Venue Starting Points
VenueAudience SizeMain HeightTypical Delay Start
Coffeehouse corner24-35 ft wide, 35-50 ft deep8-10 ft acoustic centerUsually none unless room is long and quiet
Rock club room40-55 ft wide, 65-90 ft deep10-14 ft acoustic center45-60 ft from stage with 5-10 ms offset
Worship hall50-75 ft wide, 90-130 ft deep14-22 ft acoustic center70-90 ft from stage, image held at mains
Outdoor festival80-160 ft wide, 180-350 ft deep18-35 ft acoustic center110-180 ft, often with multiple delay rings
🔊 Speaker Coverage Reference
Nominal PatternBest UseCoverage At 50 ftPlacement Note
60 degrees horizontalLong throw, narrow rooms58 ft wideNeeds careful toe-in to avoid center buildup
75 degrees horizontalMedium rooms and clubs77 ft wideOften works well for L/R point-source mains
90 degrees horizontalGeneral PA coverage100 ft wideGood default when side walls are controlled
100-120 degrees horizontalShort throw or wide rooms119-173 ft wideWatch wall splash and open microphones
Delay Timing Reference
Distance DifferenceTime At 68 FMusical MeaningUse In PA
5 ft4.4 msVery short slap rangeFine alignment and small fill offsets
10 ft8.9 msPrecedence-friendly delayTypical image offset for fills
25 ft22.2 msAudible space if unmanagedDelay speaker time-of-flight correction
50 ft44.3 msClear echo without alignmentLong room delay zone timing
📡 Sub/Main Alignment Reference
CrossoverWavelengthHalf CycleAlignment Note
60 Hz18.8 ft / 5.7 m8.3 msSmall distance changes create large phase shifts
80 Hz14.1 ft / 4.3 m6.3 msCommon live sound sub-main crossover point
100 Hz11.3 ft / 3.4 m5.0 msUseful for compact tops with limited low end
120 Hz9.4 ft / 2.9 m4.2 msMore localization risk if subs are spread wide
Aiming tip: Start by aiming the vertical center of the main cabinet slightly beyond the middle of the audience. If the calculated aim point lands at the back wall, lower the trim height, increase down-tilt, or use fills instead of forcing one box to cover everything.
Alignment tip: Use the delay values as a setup note, then confirm with measurement. Polarity, filters, processing latency, and cabinet phase response can change the best sub-main setting even when the distance math looks perfect.

Speaker placement can affect teh entire sounds of a show because speaker placement determine how the sound travels through the room. Moving a speaker just one foot or changing an angle of a speaker by a few degrees can change the way that sound covers the audiences. If a speaker is properly placed, the sound within the room will be more even throughout the room.

If the speakers isnt properly placed, however, the sound within the room may have muddy areas that are difficult to hear. The shape of the room is one of the primary factor to consider when placing speakers into a room. The shape of the room determines the way in which sound travels to the listeners within that room.

How to Place Speakers for Even Sound

In a long and narrow room, the speakers should be aimed differently than in a wide and shallow room. In the long and narrow rooms, the distance from the speakers to the last listener in the room will be much more greater than in the wide and shallow rooms. Additionally, the height of the speakers is another of the primary factor to consider.

If the speakers are placed above the level of the audiences ears, the speakers will need to have a downward angle to aim the sound to the audience. If the angle is too steep, the audience in the front rows of the audience will be exposed to too much sounds. If the angle is too flat, however, the sound will hit the back wall of the room.

Another of the factors to consider is the coverage angle of the speakers. For instance, a speaker with a 90 degree coverage angle may be appropriate for a club with that coverage angle, but may not allow sound to reach the sides of a wide hall. To address this issue, either toe in can be used or side fill speakers can be added to the system.

The vertical coverage pattern of the speakers also has an effect on the sound in the room. The vertical coverage of the sound energy should be aimed in such a way that the sound does not hit the ceiling of the room. A too-tight vertical coverage angle, however, will require more precision in aiming the speakers.

A deviation from the proper aim will cause the sound to not reach the audience in the last row of the listening area. Another factor to consider is the placement of the delay speakers. Delay speakers are used in those instances in which the main speakers cannot reach the back of the room.

The goal with the placement of delay speakers is to ensure that every area of the room sounds the same. Thus, the same amount of time should be provided to the individuals in the rear of the room as those in the front of the room. The delay offset can be calculated based off the distance between the delay speakers and the main speakers.

If the offset is not provided to the delay speakers, the audience will feel the sound as distant from those seated in the back of the room. Subwoofers is placed in a manner that is different from the placement of the main speakers. The subwoofers and main speakers are different in that low frequencies are similar to pressure in the room as opposed to the directed sound of the main speakers.

Thus, the distance between the subwoofers and main speakers impact the way in which they combine with the rest of the sound in the room. The crossover frequency and the wavelength effect the combination between the subwoofers and main speakers. A small change in the distance between the subwoofers and main speakers can change the combination from additive to subtractive.

Thus, a measurement microphone should be used to measure the way in which the subwoofers and main speakers combines with each other. Air temperature can impact the way in which the sound travels through the room. More specifically, air temperature can impact the timing of the sound.

The speed of sound changes with air temperature; sound move more slowly in cold air than in warm air. Thus, changing the air temperature in the room will impact the way in which delay speakers are felt by the audience. For example, if a band moves from an air conditioned room to an outdoor location, the difference in air temperature will impact the sound created by the delay speakers; the audience will feel as if the delay speakers are late in relation to the main speakers because of the change in air temperature.

Finally, there are some common mistake in speaker placement. For instance, many speaker placement strategies involve aiming the speakers at the back wall of the room rather than the audience in the last row of the room. Additionally, the left and right main speakers are often too far apart from each other for the width of the audience in the room.

Finally, delay zones are often created with only the time-of-flight difference between the main and delay speakers, but without adding a precedence offset to that time-of-flight difference. While there are some calculations that can be made regarding the placement of speakers, the decisions must also be made with you’re ears. For instance, as the engineers walk through the room with music playing, the engineers should check the vocals for evenness at the sides of the audience, as the subwoofers should not be canceling each other out in the middle of the room.

Small adjustments can be made to the placement of the speakers after this initial sound check. Small adjustments to placement will account for the way in which the sound reflects off of the surfaces in the room and how the air in the room impact the sound. Finally, when main and delay speakers are properly placed, the two will act as if they are one speaker.

PA Speaker Placement Calculator for Live Sound

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