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Tagged: SQ-7 GX4816 fire alarm
- This topic has 13 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 6 days, 15 hours ago by Tobi.
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2024/10/01 at 3:07 pm #126095SamParticipant
Fire alarm connection for A&H SQ-7/GX4816 sound system.
My church currently has an A&H iLive T112 surface and IDR-32 MixRack sound system which we are going to retire and replace with an A&H SQ-7 and GX4816.
Our church building has a fire alarm system which will send a signal via a relay to our current IDR-32 MixRack to silence the sound system in the event of a fire alarm (so that the congregation can hear the building fire alarms). The cable from the fire alarm relay is connected to the IDR-32 MixRack at the PL-Anet RS485 connection located in the lower left corner at the back of the MixRack (see attached photos). The GX4816 doesn’t seem to have such a connection.
Does anybody know how I can automatically silence the SQ-7 GX4816 sound system in the event of a fire alarm?
Thank you.
Sam2024/10/01 at 4:49 pm #126099TomParticipantI would use the footswitch input at the console.
Tip and ring can be assigned different functions, so you have actually two inputs.2024/10/01 at 5:04 pm #126100BrianParticipantI suspect the system is using GPIO for this functionality. The iLive system has a PL-8 which is a 4in/4out GPIO device that connects to the Mixrack via the PL-Anet port. If you investigate further, I think you’ll find this PL-8 device with a direct connection to the fire alarm system. A&H has a GPIO device that works with the Avantis, DLive, and AHM systems. (https://www.allen-heath.com/hardware/controllers/gpio/). However I am not aware of any GPIO support for the SQ.
You could always use a speaker processing unit that supports GPIO (including potentially a AHM system) that you put after the SQ and before the speakers. It would be able to mute the speakers even if the SQ cannot.
2024/10/01 at 5:24 pm #126104BrianParticipantJust to clarify…. the three AHM systems actually have some GPIO I/O built in. Therefore you won’t have to purchase the external GPIO unit unless you need more than 2 in / 2 out GPIO that the AHM devices offer (which is unlikely for just the alarm system).
Also, your local code may require the fire alarm system be able to automatically disable the speakers. Therefore finding a solution may not be optional.
2024/10/03 at 1:14 pm #126151SamParticipantAny idea how to use MIDI to silence the SQ-7 for a fire alarm? In other words, how do you convert an on/off signal from the fire alarm relay to a MIDI command to silence the SQ-7?
2024/10/03 at 1:17 pm #126152SamParticipantThanks Tom. How do I do that with an on/off signal from the fire alarm relay?
2024/10/03 at 2:15 pm #126155SQuserParticipantExcuse me if I’m wrong, but based on your questions, it seems to me that your training and level of knowledge are not sufficient to implement something like this.
The problem is that this is certainly a safety device that has to be installed and approved by a specialist company.
Fire protection systems are designed to save lives and if you put something together here and then, in an emergency, a malfunction causes injury or death to people, you have a huge problem.
In principle, it could be implemented using the foot switch socket, but what if someone accidentally pulls the plug or a scene or show is recalled up where the foot switch is not programmed?
So is it an absolute no-go!
Read also what Brain wrote again.2024/10/03 at 2:29 pm #126158SQuserParticipant> Read also what Brain wrote again.
Sorry, I meant Brian of course!
Although “Brain” is a bit fitting too. 🙂2024/10/03 at 3:03 pm #126162SamParticipantThanks Brian. Sounds like I can get something like the Allen & Heath AHM-16 16 X 16 Audio Matrix Processor and use it together with the GX4816 and I should be able to send a signal from the fire alarm relay to the AHM and make it silence the sound system?
2024/10/03 at 3:41 pm #126166BrianParticipantAHM will sit between the SQ and the PA. The SQ console will still handle all of the mixing requirements and you would take the outputs from the SQ that are destined for your PA system and instead send those outputs to the AHM device. Inside the AHM device, you would handle any speaker processing requirements (splitting audio into matrixes, putting crossovers/EQ/delay/all pass filters/etc on outputs, etc, etc, etc) as well as be able to set up the GPIO input to mute the PA when the fire alarm went off.
While this requires an extra cost for the AHM device, it is a better solution IMHO because it does two things. First, it makes the fire alarm work as expected/required and second, it frees up any speaker processing that you might have planned to do on the SQ console. The three matrix limitation on the SQ might not be so restrictive when you add the AHM for example.
2024/10/03 at 3:55 pm #126167SamParticipantThanks! Brian. Sounds good.
A different idea. What do you think of using MIDI to silence the SQ?
2024/10/03 at 4:58 pm #126168BrianParticipantUnfortunately, I’m not really familiar enough with MIDI integration to be able to answer that question.
2024/10/03 at 5:24 pm #126169TobiParticipantIn Case of fire shutdown the Empfängers directly… Dont use SQ for that… That would Not BE a Safe way to shutdown audio. Imagine someone accidrntly Changes the programming of the footswitch.
2024/10/03 at 5:28 pm #126170TobiParticipantAmplifiers i mean… Sorry German Auto correction
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