Your browser is out-of-date!

Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now

×

Crown Audio amps make a Point of nuclear safety

The plant required a ‘Voice of God’ PA to reliably deliver pages all day long and which could be clearly heard for any alert and emergency situations that might occur.

The Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station, a power plant located near New Brunswick, Canada, recently underwent a complete audio upgrade featuring Harman’s Crown CTs Series Amplifiers.

Point Lepreau, which began operating in 1983, has been redesigned to meet all current nuclear facility standards including its public address and life safety systems.

Halifax, Nova Scotia-based integrator Backman Vidcom, was selected to install the plant-wide public address system as a replacement to its 30-year-old predecessor.

What the plant needed was a ‘Voice of God’ PA that could reliably deliver pages all day long and could be clearly heard for any alert and emergency situations that might occur.

“Since 9/11, much closer attention has been paid to life safety systems,” said Steve O’Rourke, audio division manager, Backman Vidcom. “Along with security, fire protection and rescue systems, the PA system has an extremely important role in plant safety. People need to be able to hear announcements and alerts clearly – it can be a matter of life and death in an emergency situation.”

The Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station system includes 18 Crown CTs Series CTs 8200USP/CN power amplifiers with CobraNet networking cards and 32 Crown CTs 2000 amps with PIP3 card connectivity.

“This gives us a total of 208 channels and 92,800 watts of power,” O’Rourke noted. “We needed the networking capability the Crown amps provide because we designed the installation to be a completely self-monitoring system.”

Equally important, the system absolutely had to keep functioning during emergency situations and had to be CSA (Canadian Standards Association) certified and assembled to nuclear-grade standards. For these reasons O’Rourke only used most reliable components and built in a level of redundancy so that the PA would keep working even if parts of it incurred physical damage.

“The Crown amplifiers proved ideal for this unique situation because of their networking, internal processing and status reporting capabilities. We also chose them for their reliability, limited current draw and small thermal footprint,” added O’Rourke. “The flexibility of the Crown amps was key for making this installation work. I can’t imagine having undertaken this project with any other amplifier.”

www.bvci.ca
www.harman.com