It would be helpful if you had the list of equipment you are talking about. Name and model# otherwise you'll get nothing but speculation (amp and speakers). If there is any protection for the speakers it would be in the amps. Compression and limiting has little to do with it.
The amp for the mains is a QSC CMX300V, 120V. I read about it, and it does appear to have some speaker protection features included, but I didn't see anything about a limiter. I just thought I'd check to see if there was any additional ways to prevent users from getting happy with the faders on the iPad.
I was told that since this was being run as a 70V bridged mono system, I would want to run the amp at full power, and then set my gain structure through the pre-amp and channel faders. I've done that, but noticed some clipping on the amp that I wasn't expecting at the volume we were playing music through it.
Admittedly, it was "Harlem Shake" and it was a terrible recording, which likely had a lot to do with it. It just reminded me that it's EXACTLY the type of thing that is going to happen in a school cafetorium, so I thought I'd at least make every precaution necessary to preserve the speakers.
The second amp is a Boeringer BE-EPQ2000. It just powers the single hanging monitor, which sounds and works surprisingly well, and I'm not concerned about its volume, because it is plenty loud enough on even a moderate channel volume and the amp is more power than necessary.
The speakers are a Vector Ceiling Array speaker manufactured by Pure Resonance, and they are a 120 Watts Built-in 8 Ohm / 70 Volts. We have four of them "daisy chained" which is a total of 12 speakers. This system is mono bridged and running in the 70 volt configuration.
So that's the rundown. He also recommended, since these are children's voices, to also have an Aphex Big Bottom and Aural Exciter to "beef up" the sound. I have to admit, I was very skeptical about that since it is typically used for recording applications, but there is a very noticeable difference with it on or off in the chain, and my guess is that it has something to do with the limited low end response of the Vector ceiling speakers. Maybe a really good engineer could get the same out of the 31 band EQ on the DL, but I can't.
Surprisingly, the relatively inexpensive AKG DMS70D with DHT70 mics sound pretty good. I used my SM58 right next to one, and the difference wasn't what I expected. We went low cost, because we acknowledge that damage will occur, and they are only $165.00 to replace. Pleasant surprise thus far...
So that's what I'm up against, and the more I type here and think about it, I'm considering looking into a one time fee for a sound engineer to come tweak the system and get it set up rather than trying to "amateur" my way through it. I know good sound when I hear it, and I can mix an analog Yamaha powered mixing board and make it sing for two guitarists and vocals, but this thing is getting a little above my pay grade, which is strictly volunteer.
Once again, thanks for taking the time to help, and it has been invaluable to this point.