For what purpose? Just for sealing? Or for decoupling? You can only decouple a wall with neoprene underneath it if you also use some form of isolation on the bolts that hold the wall in place, and if you do your calculations correctly and only tighten the bolts so that they do not over-compress the neoprene. Compress it too much, and it flanks, so you gained nothing. The neoprene has to be compressed to the optimum range when the room is finished: if not, then you waste a lot of time, money and effort for no purpose at all, if your objective is decoupling the walls.Would I get any benefit from having them resting on a rubber strip (as I've done on the other walls), or wont this be necessary in your opinion?
But if you just want to seal them, then you don't need isolated bolts, and you can tighten them any way you want.
So assuming you are just planning to use neoprene for sealing, not for decoupling:
The bass trap frames do not need sealing if you are going to do superchunks or some other form of pure absorptive treatment, but if you are going to do a tuned treatment (like slot walls or some such) then they do need sealing.
But what concerns me is that angled wall thing on the right, highlighted in red: What is that? Is that going to be a slot wall or something? You cannot put drywall on that, since it would create a third leaf, so I'm assuming it will be a slot wall? If so, then yes, it does need sealing. If not, then what are your plans for that?
- Stuart -