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InfoComm Updates Standard for Audio Coverage Uniformity (ACU) in Listener Areas

Published: 2017-05-10

Although InfoComm’s Audio Coverage Uniformity (ACU) was released in 2009, the trade organization saw fit to update with Audio Coverage Uniformity (ACU) in Listener Areas (ANSI/INFOCOMM A102.01:2017).The 2017 version expands to cover most listener areas.

The performance of a sound system can be characterized by several factors, including coverage uniformity, tonal balance and consistency, gain before feedback and maximum sound pressure level, writes InfoComm in a press release.

The ACU standard focuses on the uniformity of coverage of a sound system’s early-arriving energy to a listener area.

“There will be greater consistency in results and reporting, and reduced time in the field taking measurements,” says Ann Brigida, CTS, CStd, Director of Standards, InfoComm International.

It adds that an ideal sound system design allows all listeners to hear reproduced content at approximately the same sound pressure level independent of the listener’s position in a designated area. This performance standard provides a procedure to measure and a means to classify the uniformity of coverage.

“The updated standard takes advantage of improved measurement platforms, which will allow the user to gain a much better understanding of exactly how a system is performing, opening the door to providing enhanced user experiences,” said Ann Brigida, CTS, CStd, Director of Standards, InfoComm International.

“There will be greater consistency in results and reporting, and reduced time in the field taking measurements.”

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“This is the first rewrite of a standard and we learned a great deal in the process,” said Thom Mullins, CTS, moderator for the standard task group and Senior Consultant for Affiliated Engineers Inc.

“Our goals were to make the standard easier to implement, to bring the standard up to date with current measurement techniques and systems, to provide a means of quantifying the performance of a room or system that is easy to understand, and to base the standard on solid evidence and understanding of human perception. I believe we’ve achieved those objectives, and we’re looking forward to the industry’s response and adoption.”

More from InfoComm’s ANSI/INFOCOMM A102.01:2017 Press Release:

The standard will be available soon at infocomm.org/standards. It’s free for members and available for purchase by non-members. In addition, InfoComm will publish a design guide and field guide to help professionals implement the standard.

[related] InfoComm is an ANSI Accredited Standards Developer (ASD). More than 700 industry volunteers support InfoComm’s standards development, which has resulted in seven ANSI-certified standards, plus a joint standard with the Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association (CEDIA) and the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) governing the use of audio, video, and control architectural drawing symbols.

InfoComm International maintains a Standards Steering Committee that provides oversight to the standards development task groups responsible for specific standards. The Standards Steering Committee is the consensus body that reports to the InfoComm International Board of Directors.

Posted in: News

Tagged with: InfoComm

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