Located on U.S. Highway 50, about 60 miles east of Pueblo, the town of La Junta is home to about 5,000 residents. Approximately 230 - almost five percent of the population - belong to the La Junta Church of the Nazarene, and the congregation continues to grow.
The church's contemporary-style services include a full praise band but sound reinforcement has long been a challenge due to a very outdated system falling far short of their needs. "The previous system had old, mostly blown speakers that should have been replaced ten years ago, two mediocre outboard EQs, and a crossover that was not doing anything," recalls Lucas Lafferty, co-owner of systems integrator DK Audio Video of Colorado Springs. Lafferty's team specified a new system, including a 1,600-watt Mackie HD1801 subwoofer with an 18-inch speaker that he says delivers all of the sub-lows required.
"They adapted to the DL32R very quickly,"
Lucas Lafferty
Co-owner, Systems Integrator DK Audio Video, Colorado Springs, CO.
That left the question of the mixer and processing. The church's analog mixer -a Mackie 2404VLZ4- was good quality according to Lafferty, but it was time to go digital, eliminate the outboard gear, and get more mixer channels. Lafferty's answer: a Mackie DL32R rackmount digital mixer.
He says the DL32R delivered the sound quality and feature set the church wanted. The question was how the praise team would adjust to a digital mixer. "They adapted to the DL32R very quickly," Lafferty responds. "They call me up with questions once in awhile but most of the time I can resolve it over the phone. Overall they have found the DL32R easy to learn and use."
Another tool the La Junta Church of the Nazarene team is using quite extensively is the DL32R's matrix functionality. "We're running in mono," details Lafferty, "and we matrixed everything into a single channel output. We also send a feed to the subwoofer that uses a DL32R low-pass filter to roll off the highs. With the DL32R processing and routing, we don't need a separate room DSP system."
Switching from an aging system to state-of-the-art technology could have been difficult, Lafferty admits, but the Mackie's ease of use made the transition a smooth one. "Slowly but surely everything has come together really well," he confirms. "They have been very happy with the overall capabilities of the system and with the sound."