When the second edition of RH Consulting’s Guide to Voice Alarm Systems was
published recently (joint authored by eminent pro audio consultants Roland
Hemming and Richard Northwood, in e-book format), Powersoft was quick to
respond.
The Italian amplifier giants instantly saw that this could be adapted to provide their
own customers with a bespoke version as an educational tool, offering specific
information about deploying Powersoft products for emergency applications.
They were soon in contact with RH Consulting with the result that the Powersoft
release has now been made public.
The Guide to Voice Alarm Systems is an extremely useful reference for anyone
involved in the implementation of emergency audio systems. New to the Powersoft
edition is a loudspeaker power calculator, embedded product sheets and videos, and
an updated version of the worldwide Voice Alarm Standards finder.
This second edition has been extremely well received by the industry, boosted by
an excellent independent review. The benefits of the updated guide were
demonstrated at a recent Powersoft training seminar at InfoComm in Las Vegas
when all the attendees on the training course received free copies of the guide and
Roland Hemming himself gave a presentation about the publication.
“We’re so pleased to have worked with Powersoft on this and we have tailored the
original book to reflect Powersoft’s solutions,’ stated Hemming.
“We could not think of a better way to explain the use of our products in emergency
audio systems,’ confirmed Francesco Fanicchi, Brand and Communication Director
at Powersoft. “The Powersoft Guide to Voice Alarm Systems teaches our
consultants, manufacturers, installers and venue owners all the essentials.’
Added Marc Kocks, Powersoft’s Business Development Manager for the Fixed Install
market in EMEA, “For anyone involved in the voice alarm business this is invaluable.
Features such as the loudspeaker power calculator, the worldwide Voice Alarm
standards finder and the various comparative tables on standards requirements are
information that they would find difficult to get from any other source.’