 Hi, this is Michelle Getzinger and I'm here at the jail project in Freeport, PA just right outside of Pittsburgh and I'm here with Larry from This New Tech. Yeah. We're going to wire the jail tonight for some speakers and he's going to tell me how this whole process works. So I wanted to bring you out here to kind of show you the space and tell you what's going on. Up here is going to be a chandelier. Okay. It's going to affect what you're doing. Actually, yeah. I'm glad you brought that up. What we want to do with the sound is we want to avoid anything hanging from the ceiling and get the sound away from that. Chandeliers, ceiling fans, anything like that, we want to get the sound away from it. It's going to reverb. It's not going to really jive well. So anything you can point out as we walk through, perfect. Okay. This area right here, you have all this plumbing. What's going to happen here? This is going to be the kitchen. There's going to be a refrigerator, a pantry, and then it's going to start like a big, long galley kitchen. Okay. That's going to be nice. Yeah. So here is, we probably want to concentrate since this is going to be a gathering point. We want to add more speakers to that area. Okay. One key feature about the speakers and the reason we're doing so many is you want to be able to have a conversation and not just hear the music. So by spreading that sound out, we're able to lower the volume of the sound, still enjoy it, still have a conversation. Okay. So anywhere around here, we'll do the same thing, but we want to keep as many speakers as possible. Okay. It's not just to turn it up. It's just so we can have a conversation. All right. Good deal. Do you need to know where the TVs are going to be? Yeah, absolutely. How would you deal with the sound there? What we do in a scenario like this, since this is essentially a commercial space, we want to repeat the sound from the TV to all the speakers. Okay. So we're not going to do a traditional surround sound system with like five speakers and you can hear the helicopter going around you. We're just going to take the voice from this TV and put it throughout the whole building. Okay. So what we'll do is we'll add a wire from here and we'll take it to our hidden amplifier. So there's a source input. Okay. Therefore we can have sound from the whole building. Oh, great. That brings me back to a good question here. What do they look like? So basically the easiest way to describe them is take a flower pot, turn it upside down. Okay. You have that cone shape and now suspend from the middle that a wire. So they'll hang down probably about three feet upside down flower pot speaker underneath. Okay. The biggest question I get is are they paintable? And the answer is yes. We can make them any color you want or we can leave them white or black. Okay. So basically what we did the first thing is we set the box, the box of speaker wire. In this case we're using 16.2, 16 gauge two wire to every speaker. We're going to do an eight-ohm system so we're home running every single speaker wire back to where the amp is going to be. Take it up, take in the ceiling, avoid any obstacles. Try to keep it above the threshold of the lumber. Today when you put the drywall on there, your wire doesn't get smashed. We got one speaker wired and we got many more to go. Hey, thanks for watching. Don't forget to click like and subscribe and we'll see you next time.