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OT - Studio design question [message #104224] |
Wed, 14 October 2009 21:49 |
pbraun
Messages: 63 Registered: June 2009 Location: Northwest Indiana
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While I'm in a question-asking mood....
Now that I've got the mixing bug again, it's time to put up some damn walls in this concrete box of a basement.
My little corner paradise will be about 12' wide by 17' deep, with roughly 7' ceiling clearance.
Since you have to put bass traps in the corners anyway, would it be smart to frame out the walls and then frame the corners at a small diagonal, essentially creating an octagon-shaped room? That would eliminate 90-degree corners, at least vertical ones.
I'm going to do this with alternating studs for inside and outside surfaces, glued to the walls and floors for extra isolation, two layers of drywall on both sides, dense rockwool in between. I live in a condo, and share one of the walls with our neighbor's basement, plus I share the ceiling with the CFO and I've learned it doesn't pay to piss her off on "Survivor" night.
Due to the cost of such a project, I'll probably be doing one wall at a time, but want to have the overall plan down before I start.
I've read at least a dozen articles on home studio construction, and they all say something different. And while I'd love to have layers of mass-loaded vinyl in between each layer of drywall, suspended on isolation channel, as of tonight we still haven't won Powerball so that ain't happening.
Paul Braun, Certified Music Junkie
"Music washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." -- Harlan Howard
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Re: OT - Studio design question [message #104230 is a reply to message #104229] |
Thu, 15 October 2009 10:58 |
pbraun
Messages: 63 Registered: June 2009 Location: Northwest Indiana
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OK, my head just exploded. Gimme a minute to clean the brain matter off my monitor.
(wiping, wiping, wiping....)
I'm back.
I may go with the trapezoidal room concept, but frame the outside square to make it look neater. Gotta go with double walls anyway, nothing says they have to be parallel.
No matter what, it will have to be "plan once, build piece-by-piece" as budget allows.
And who knows? Once I fix up the rest of the joint, I may set up a recording space in the other part of the basement. It would have to be musos I know and trust, 'cuz I'm not comfortable with strangers walking through my living room and seeing our art collection...
Paul Braun, Certified Music Junkie
"Music washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." -- Harlan Howard
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Re: OT - Studio design question [message #104333 is a reply to message #104233] |
Thu, 19 November 2009 12:06 |
mylescdavis
Messages: 7 Registered: November 2009
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Hi, Paul -
I'd suggest you try the simplest and cheapest approach first.
At your Home Depot (or local big box building supply equivalent), find some fiberglass or rockwool slabs 2 inches or 4 inches thick. 703 is the Owens Corning fiberglass variety; the Rockwool you want is approximately 45kg/m3 in density. It's named differently in different countries.
What you want to do is cut these panels (they're usually 2 x 4 feet, or 600 x 1200mm) so that you have the largest triangles you can make, or that you can tolerate in your room from a losing-floorspace point of view. Stack them up from floor to ceiling in two corners. If you like what happens (as you probably will), do the same in your other two corners. It will be great for mixing - you'll be surprised at the difference in what you hear (and don't) in the room.
You can also make wood frames for these panels and hang them on the walls, which is important to do at any reflective spots between you and your monitors.
A whole industry has grown out of making acoustic stuff to sell to people. 95% of it can be done yourself, pretty cheaply, with the same materials the manufacturers use. They're selling convenience, not better technology.
You can see these in my studio here: http://mylescochran.com/studiofrance.htm
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Re: OT - Studio design question [message #104336 is a reply to message #104334] |
Fri, 20 November 2009 13:54 |
pbraun
Messages: 63 Registered: June 2009 Location: Northwest Indiana
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I kinda dig the trapezoidal LCD in the middle...
I've planned on remoting the pcs already. I've got a square wire restaurant shelf about 6' high with three shelves - bottom one will hold the G5 and the APC 2500 UPS, middle shelf will hold the HP XW Twins, and I'll probably just lay the G4 with the Oasys card on it's side on the top shelf. All those cables will be routed through a passthrough stuffed with sound-deadening uhhhh....stuff.
I was toying with mounting the Oasys G4 in the rack with the MECs since I have a spare set of Marathon rackmounts, but then I realized that would put the fan/HD noise of the G4 in the studio instead of outside.
Actually, is there a reason to keep the MECs in the studio? Could they also be outside the room with snakes connecting them to a patch bay?
Since I'm building the walls from scratch, I'm still toying with a trapezoidal room. I'll definitely go with the DIY corner blockers and things that have been mentioned - cheaper is more gooder, in this case.
Paul Braun, Certified Music Junkie
"Music washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." -- Harlan Howard
[Updated on: Fri, 20 November 2009 13:56] Report message to a moderator
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