FLOORING
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- Senior Member
- Posts: 6976
- Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2003 11:11 am
- Location: West Coast, USA
The color of things in a studio only affects your perception visually - what matters is the acoustic performance of each part of the room - this is a function of how hard/soft, porosity, surface smoothness, rigidity of mounting, etc - from an acoustic standpoint, there's not a lot of difference between concrete, vinyl and wood - the difference comes in by way of how they are supported - this changes the acoustics by changing the firmness of the mounting, the resonance behind the surface (like walls, and floated floors, ceilings) - concrete, because it's stiffer than just about any other material normally used, returns more bass to the room (and requires more bass trapping to get the room neutral) - wood, unless it's glued directly to the concrete, will always be at least a bit more flexible (therefore more absorbent) at lower frequencies - at higher frequencies, reflectiveness makes more of a difference than stiffness.
Generally, ANY type of hard floor is better in a studio than ANY carpet, which only absorbs fairly high frequencies and therefore deadens the room without maintaining even frequency response.
Hope that helped... Steve
Generally, ANY type of hard floor is better in a studio than ANY carpet, which only absorbs fairly high frequencies and therefore deadens the room without maintaining even frequency response.
Hope that helped... Steve
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- Posts: 25
- Joined: Thu May 27, 2004 7:32 am
- Location: Baton Rouge, La
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- Senior Member
- Posts: 6976
- Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2003 11:11 am
- Location: West Coast, USA
Closest thing we have so far are sources in Houston and Dallas - here's a link -
http://www.spi-co.com/servicecenterdirectory.mv
Listed under Louisiana all they show are 4 places in Texas. You might get closer by checking your local yellow pages under commercial insulation contractors; some will sell to individuals, some not. People usually just call every possible til they get a "yes" -
The material you want will be either mineral wool, rockwool or rigid fiberglass preferably in 2-4 pounds per cubic foot - prices should run less than $1 per square foot for 1", and thicker stuff proportionally higher. 2" is minimum for most purposes.
Hope that helps... Steve
http://www.spi-co.com/servicecenterdirectory.mv
Listed under Louisiana all they show are 4 places in Texas. You might get closer by checking your local yellow pages under commercial insulation contractors; some will sell to individuals, some not. People usually just call every possible til they get a "yes" -
The material you want will be either mineral wool, rockwool or rigid fiberglass preferably in 2-4 pounds per cubic foot - prices should run less than $1 per square foot for 1", and thicker stuff proportionally higher. 2" is minimum for most purposes.
Hope that helps... Steve