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gosu-pk
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Aug 20, 2008
Posts: 1
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Books To Read
Your Forum Posts
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Posted:
Wed Aug 20, 2008 5:55 am |
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I'd like to make my room into a small recording studio, mainly for Acoustic guitar and soft at times loud vocals.. is it possible? I live on a 2nd story house with carpeted flooring, a huge closet with a sliding door, built in room cabinets?, and a window the size of about 5x8. The room is about 11x11 with my everyday essentials such as a very tall desktop with my computer, bed, tv, dresser, clothes, ect.. The walls are dry wall, and the ceiling has a very spikey-rough-dry wall-ish type of texture..
I recently purchased 4x twin mattress foam pads, 1 inch thick and each the size of a twin bed. I've already placed 1 mattress pad on my door which only covers 9/10th of the door... should it cover the complete door? i also placed a mattress foam pad on my ceiling, and then i placed another mattress foam pad covering my whole window..
i will also place 1 more mattress pad i have randomly somewhere on my wall.
Do I have to cover my WHOLE room with mattress pads? how about the flooring? i've heard someone say you also have to cover the floor somehow as well, as well as the ceiling? if the whole room doesn't have to be covered with mattress foam pads, how far apart does each one have to be from each other? Will it be okay if my closet took up 1/6th of my room? it has a bunch of clothes.. i can close the closet with my sliding door.. will that effect the sounds? should I place the mattress foam pad on the sliding door?
what have I done wrong so far? what do i need? I'd love to buy things at a very affordable rate as i'm going to college next week so my cash is a bit strict
will mattress foam pads work? i've read people saying they've used mattress pads, egg cartons, ect. to 'soundproof' a room. I basically want to sound proof my room.
Sorry for the long post.. I'd just like to be as detailed as possible.
thanks a ton... = )
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Ajhxozlub9kV1eaCKn0qKP3sy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080820044256AA3HuNK |
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MadMax
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 18, 2001
Posts: 1335
Location: Sunny & warm NC
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Books To Read
Your Forum Posts
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Posted:
Wed Aug 20, 2008 6:22 am |
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PLEASE follow this link to Rod's READ THIS BEFORE YOU POST... or read it below...
Either way, you will not receive much help without at least some of Rod's minimum required information being a part of your post.
| Rod Gervais wrote: | Finally I have to put up one of these.
Before you post please make certain you do the following:
IF YOU FAIL TO DO THIS STEVE AND I WILL NOT RESPOND
Use the search feature to look for threads that may contain the answer to your question. There is a wide variety of projects represented in this forum -- everything from relatively low-budget residential rehearsal rooms to full-scale, professional recording studios. If your searches return too many results, try multiple terms with "Search for all terms" enabled.
If those efforts do not lead you to the answers you need, you are welcome to post your questions on the forum. If you do so:
Edit your profile to include your location. This is very important, because this is a worldwide resource, and as such, material costs and availability vary widely. For example, masonry is cheaper than gypsum in some parts of the globe, whereas it's the exact opposite in other regions. We're not asking for your address or credit card number, just a country will do.
Start your post with an overview of your goals and where you are in the process... Research? Planning? Construction already underway? Finished, and wanna know why it doesn't work?
HOW LOUD are you, and how picky/loud are your neighbors? How close? This is subjective, so you will need to buy something like the Radio Shack Sound Level Meter
Trust me, if you're recording/mixing music you should be using this ALWAYS, so it's not a waste of money. For music at typical mix levels, you want to use "C" weighting, slow. The human ear has no way of "measuring" ABSOLUTE sound levels; it just adapts to what's there, and calls that "normal" - so if you keep raising the volume, pretty soon you're mixing at 110 dB, ruining your hearing and neighbor "atta-boy" points, etc - the SPL meter helps you keep levels constant and safe.
For all other tests, the authorities virtually ALWAYS use A weighting, and (I think) slow response. So for compliance, use "A" weighting measurements.
Include as much detail as possible about the existing construction. Having details about anatomy of your existing floor, walls, and ceiling is critical. In your searches of the forum, you'll likely find examples of the kinds of details that are needed, and you'll see that the quality and timeliness of the advice given are affected by the level of detail provided.
Please don't tell us you want to float your floor if you are building on an upper level - this is almost always impractical, and ALWAYS will require a LOCAL ENGINEER to verify that it will be safe.
Remember that acoustics is THREE DIMENSIONAL, not two - when you give dimensions, we need Length, Width, Height, plus any NON-parallel features of the room.
Include drawings of what you're describing if at all possible. They do not need to be professional or perfectly to scale, but they do need to account for the necessary details. Cropping your drawing will allow you to make the important parts larger and more legible without increasing the overall size. See next...
Please resize as necessary to keep graphics BETWEEN 700 and 750 pixels wide - otherwise it's either too small for details or it forces people to scroll sideways to read every line of text.
If you link to pix OFF this site, please make sure THOSE pix aren't oversized either - it causes the SAME PROBLEM.
_________________
Rod Gervais
Acoustics Moderator Sometimes - late at night..... when the wind whips
through the trees........ and the moon shines bright in my
face......... I think deep thoughts.......... and my head hurts. |
Rod Gervais' book "Build it Like the Pro's" is an excellent source of information.
You can also try the search function of the forum for what you are looking for. |
_________________ The insanity can be seen in bigger pix and greater detail at: http://www.dmmobile.com
"A committee is a cul-de-sac down which ideas are lured and then quietly strangled." -- Sir Barnett Cocks (1907 - 1989) |
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