How to Tune a PA System

7 steps15-20 min readUpdated 2026-03-20

Quick Answer

Tuning a PA system means measuring its frequency response using a dual-channel transfer function, then applying corrective EQ, time alignment, and level adjustments to achieve flat, coherent coverage across the listening area. This process transforms raw installed hardware into a calibrated instrument.

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Equipment Needed

  • Omnidirectional measurement microphone (e.g., Behringer ECM8000, Dayton Audio EMM-6)
  • Audio interface or USB microphone with flat frequency response
  • Laptop or phone with SonaVyx web app
  • XLR cable and mic stand
  • System processor or mixing console with parametric EQ

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Set Up Measurement Microphone

Position an omnidirectional measurement microphone at the mix position, typically 2/3 of the way back from the stage and centered between the main left and right PA hangs. Mount the mic on a stand at ear height (approximately 1.2 meters for seated audiences, 1.5 meters for standing). Avoid placing the mic directly on-axis with a single cabinet to prevent capturing only the narrowest coverage angle. If using SonaVyx, open the Transfer Function tool and select your measurement input.

2

Configure Signal Routing

Route pink noise from SonaVyx's built-in signal generator to the PA system input. In a dual-channel measurement, this reference signal feeds both the analyzer and the speakers. Set the level so the PA produces approximately 85-90 dB SPL at the mic position. This level ensures adequate signal-to-noise ratio without risking hearing damage or speaker stress. Verify the reference channel shows a clean, flat spectrum before proceeding.

3

Capture Transfer Function

Start the transfer function measurement and let it average for at least 10 seconds with linear averaging. Watch the coherence trace: values above 0.9 across the 200 Hz to 8 kHz range indicate reliable data. Low coherence below 0.5 suggests problems such as ambient noise, incorrect routing, or phase issues. The magnitude trace reveals the system's frequency response including room interaction. Switch to 1/6 or 1/3 octave smoothing for EQ decisions.

4

Apply Corrective EQ

Using the measured transfer function as a guide, apply parametric EQ cuts to reduce peaks. Focus on broad resonances first, typically room modes below 300 Hz and horn pattern narrowing above 4 kHz. Use wide Q values (0.5 to 2.0) for most corrections. Avoid boosting dips caused by comb filtering or boundary cancellations because these are spatial phenomena that EQ cannot fix. A good target is within plus or minus 3 dB of your target curve from 80 Hz to 12 kHz.

5

Set Delay Alignment

If the system has delay speakers, fills, or subwoofers, measure the impulse response to find the arrival time of each source. The delay fill should arrive at its coverage boundary simultaneously with or slightly after the main system. Use SonaVyx's delay finder to identify the propagation delay. Calculate the required electronic delay as the difference between main arrival time and fill arrival time. Typical values range from 10 to 80 milliseconds depending on throw distance.

6

Check Coverage Uniformity

Move the measurement microphone to at least four additional positions: front-center, rear-left, rear-right, and under the balcony if applicable. At each position, capture a transfer function snapshot. Compare these traces using SonaVyx's trace overlay feature. Variation of more than 6 dB across positions in the 500 Hz to 4 kHz speech band indicates coverage problems that may require physical adjustments such as rigging angle changes or additional fill speakers.

7

Verify with Program Material

Play familiar music through the system and walk the room. Listen for tonal balance consistency, adequate low-frequency extension without boominess, clear vocal presence around 2 to 4 kHz, and absence of harsh sibilance. Compare subjective impressions with measurement data. Store a final reference trace in SonaVyx for future comparison. This baseline measurement becomes invaluable when troubleshooting during shows or commissioning the system annually.

Understanding PA System Tuning

PA system tuning bridges the gap between equipment installation and professional-quality sound reproduction. A properly tuned PA delivers consistent frequency response, adequate gain before feedback, and intelligible speech across the entire coverage area. Without measurement-based tuning, even premium loudspeakers will sound unpredictable in real-world acoustic environments.

Transfer Function vs RTA

While a real-time analyzer (RTA) shows only the output spectrum, a transfer function compares input to output and removes the spectral shape of the source signal. This distinction matters enormously because pink noise is not perfectly flat from moment to moment. The transfer function with coherence weighting gives you the true system response, making your EQ decisions accurate rather than speculative. Coherence below 0.5 at any frequency tells you the measurement is unreliable there, usually due to reflections or noise.

The Role of Coherence

Coherence is a statistical measure of the linear relationship between input and output at each frequency. A coherence of 1.0 means the output is entirely determined by the input, while 0.0 means they are unrelated. In practice, frequencies with coherence below 0.7 should not be equalized because the measurement is contaminated by reflections, noise, or comb filtering. Increasing FFT averaging time improves coherence for stationary signals. SonaVyx displays coherence as a color-coded bar: green above 0.8, amber from 0.5 to 0.8, and red below 0.5.

EQ Strategy: Cut, Don't Boost

Professional system engineers follow a subtractive EQ philosophy. Peaks in the frequency response represent energy that the room and speaker interaction have concentrated at specific frequencies. Cutting these peaks reduces overall SPL by only 1 to 2 dB while dramatically improving tonal balance. Boosting dips, by contrast, wastes amplifier headroom, stresses drivers, and often fails because the dip is caused by cancellation that no amount of additional energy can overcome.

Target Curves

A perfectly flat system often sounds thin and harsh in live environments. Most engineers target a gentle downward slope of 2 to 4 dB per octave from 1 kHz to 16 kHz, often called a "house curve." Film sound systems follow the X-curve standard (ISO 2969). SonaVyx includes built-in target curve presets including Flat, X-Curve, and the popular B&K house curve. You can also create custom targets based on venue requirements and audience expectations.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Boosting EQ at frequencies where coherence is below 0.5, wasting headroom on spatial cancellations that cannot be fixed electrically

Taking measurements at only one position, which captures a single point in a complex sound field rather than the average response

Setting measurement level too low, resulting in poor signal-to-noise ratio and unreliable low-frequency data

Applying narrow notch filters to broadband room interaction problems that require physical treatment instead of EQ

Forgetting to verify polarity and delay alignment before applying EQ, which means correcting symptoms rather than causes

Applicable Standards

StandardClauseRelevance
AES-2id:2023Clause 5Defines measurement methodology for transfer function capture
IEC 61672-1Clause 5.4SPL measurement accuracy requirements for sound level at listening position
ISO 3382-1Annex ASource and receiver positions for room acoustic measurements

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