One speaker on the patio is angled toward the street instead of into the space. That's the primary source of the noise complaints — not the overall system level. Everything else on the property reads within reason. The fix is physical first: reangle or relocate that unit. The second move is adding a speaker on the opposite side of the patio so the system covers the space evenly and neither unit needs to be pushed harder to compensate.
All three are commercial-grade, built for outdoor permanent install. Pick one and match the second unit to it.
Widest install base in this category. Battle-tested in theme parks, restaurant patios, and outdoor music venues. Easy to source, easy to replace.
View specs ↗Best weather rating of the three. Widest dispersion means fewer boxes. Built-in tilt mount makes downward aiming easy — no extra bracket needed.
View specs ↗Tightest coverage angle — most controlled throw. Good if the patio has defined zones. Cleanest wall profile. Note: no IP number is published by QSC — confirm before an exposed install.
View at Crutchfield ↗True IP55 outdoor rating. 4.5" surface mount, 70V/100V. The cleanest look of the group and a higher published weather spec — worth the premium if the patio's visual design matters as much as the audio.
View at ProAcoustics ↗If starting from scratch or replacing the whole system, this is the clearest all-in-one path for a non-technical operator.
The MA120BT has Bluetooth built in, but the WiiM Pro Plus gives cleaner audio and a much better app. Add the dbx DriveRack PA2 before the first DJ night for feedback suppression and a volume limiter.
View S5 + MA120BT bundle ↗Speakers at 8–10 ft, tilted 10–20° into the seating area. High on the wall and firing level means sound goes over the guests and projects outward. Lower and aimed down hits the tables and attenuates before it reaches the fence line.
One speaker every 10–15 ft of patio coverage. For a 30–40 ft space, two or three units is right. Each covers what's directly below it, so the master volume stays low — and sound dies before it reaches the property line.
Interior corner placement means the speaker fires into the space. Reflected sound hits the back wall and diffuses instead of projecting toward the street. This is the right home for the relocated problem speaker.
Low frequencies are omnidirectional — they can't be aimed. A high-pass filter at 80 Hz (simple to set in the DSP) removes the bass bleed that carries farthest and bothers neighbors most. Outdoors there's no room gain to build up sub-bass anyway.
A solid barrier with mass — like the truck parked on the open side — blocks 10–15 dB of sound. Standard polyester tent and shade sail fabric is acoustically transparent at music frequencies; it provides almost no containment benefit. Keep using the truck as a wall for events. Don't count on the tents.
A basic amp with Bluetooth is fine for background music. Add the DSP before the first event night with a DJ or live mic — the feedback suppression alone is worth it.
The right DSP for 2–4 speakers at this scale. AutoEQ calibrates the system with a mic in minutes. App control over Wi-Fi — Jen adjusts volume and EQ from her phone without touching hardware. Set a limiter and the system won't exceed it regardless of what a DJ does.
A small streaming puck that plugs into any existing amp's aux input. Instantly adds phone-app control for source, volume, and EQ. Streams Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, AirPlay, and Chromecast. Better signal chain than a built-in Bluetooth amp.
The 10 PM rule (the one that counts). City of Orange Chapter 8.24 makes it a prima facie violation if amplified music is audible from 100 feet at the residential property line between 10 PM and 7 AM. That's not a decibel reading — it's an audibility test. If a neighbor calls after 10 PM and an officer can hear it from the street, that's the violation. DJ nights and events need to be below that threshold by 10 PM, or require a permit that explicitly covers extended hours.
There's also a 5 dB music penalty on top of the base zone limit in Table 8.24.040 — amplified music must stay 5 dB below the base commercial/residential threshold, wherever that lands for Jen's specific parcel. Call City of Orange Community Development for the actual numbers: Ch. 8.24 on Municode ↗
A professional acoustical consultant runs $750–$2,500 for a site visit and written report. That's the move if the city issues a formal violation notice or a permit hearing requires a noise study. For now: re-aim the speaker, add a DSP limiter, and use the truck as the wall for events. Do those three things first.
| Phase | Work | Hardware cost |
|---|---|---|
|
Phase 1
This week
|
Reangle the problem speaker
Tilt bracket on the existing outward-facing speaker — pointed back into the patio. Confirm the existing unit's brand and model for Phase 2 matching.
|
~$25
|
|
Phase 2
2–4 weeks
|
Add a second speaker + streaming control
One additional speaker (JBL Control 25-1, EV EVID-S4.2T, or matching existing) on the opposite side of the patio. Wire run follows existing routing. Add a WiiM Pro Plus for phone-based streaming and volume control. Even coverage, lower per-speaker level.
|
~$300–450
+ install labor
|
|
Phase 3
Before first event
|
Add DSP for event nights
dbx DriveRack PA2 for AutoEQ, feedback suppression, and a master limiter. Calibrate to the space. Jen controls volume and EQ from the PA2 app on her phone.
|
~$200
+ install labor
|