On Sunday 25 May 2014 07:47:48 Gabriel Nordeborn did opine
And Gene did reply:
Hi!
I recently moved to a new flat, and I've just got my studio properly
setup in one of the rooms. Problem is, the room is rather horrible
acoustically. As this is the room I've got to play with, I'm going to
have to make the best of it acoustically.
So, my question is about DIY acoustic absorbers. I'm most likely
looking to build absorbers both for mid/hi-end (I'm thinking the
classical rock wool ones you place spaced out a bit form the walls)
and for the lower end, but I am very much open for suggestions. Here's
some specs of my setup:
- The room is roughly 3.60m wide, 3.40m long and 2.50m high. I think at
least one wall is concrete.
- My mixing position/monitors is in the middle of the front wall. I sit
about 1.20m out from the wall.
- My monitors are small, a set of Adam A3X (so 3" elements I guess). It
basically gives very low bass response, so I can hear fairly OK down to
about 80hz, rapidly declining down to 60hz where there's nothing left.
- I am not terribly dependent on mixing at high volumes, if that
matters.
What I currently have is:
- Two large bookshelves along the wall right behind my mixing position
acting as diffusors. These go almost all the way up to the ceiling, and
has stuff unevenly stacked at different heights/positions in the
bookshelf. They cover 1.60m in the middle of the back wall.
- I also have a fairly large carpet on the floor in the middle of the
room. It probably doesn't do that much, but maybe it does a little.
My question then is; are there any effective ways of acoustically
treating this room? Of course, given the topic of the e-mail, I'm very
much willing to do my own DIY solutions, if that's a viable option.
What I have been thinking is doing what I mention above; classical
absorber "panels", and bass traps.
But, before I start anything, I'd very much like input from people who
actually know what they're talking about (I'm looking at you on this
list ;) ). So, does anyone have thoughts/suggestions for me? Any
recommended way of doing this?
Thank you very much for any help and any replies!
Many years ago, we needed a sound booth at the tv station, so we put doors
on both ends of a short 8' hallway between video production and the
newsroom. Then we covered everything but the floor & gear shelves with
Sonotex. It looks like egg cartons, but molded from a memory compounded
acoustic foam. Fairly expensive for a wall covering, but gave us an
instant acoustically dead room. And it lowered the background noise level
in the room from the air conditioning etc, at least 20db. It glues on to
install, and would be hard to get rid of the glue when you leave, probably
requiring new drywall to clean up right. Landlords might not be the least
bit impressed, so clear it with them first.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
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