Dog + Bear Studio build
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Just taking a look at your REW data, and it actually doesn't look too bad at all. Maybe a bit on the dead side in the mid range? But definitely decent.
There's some modal stuff going on, so more bass trapping might help with that, and there's a "hole" around 125 Hz that might need some attention, plus there are some reasonably strong early reflections that you might have to deal with, but overall I'd say it looks OK.
Are you planning on putting any more treatment in there (apart from the front wall)?
- Stuart -
There's some modal stuff going on, so more bass trapping might help with that, and there's a "hole" around 125 Hz that might need some attention, plus there are some reasonably strong early reflections that you might have to deal with, but overall I'd say it looks OK.
Are you planning on putting any more treatment in there (apart from the front wall)?
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
This first waterfall graph is of the control room with 200mm of FI 32 on the back wall and no super chunks. Also no front wall treatment between the soffits.
Adding a third layer of FI32 to the back wall, total 300mm and superchunking the rear corners, as well as putting a 200mm layer of FI 32 between the soffits has changed the room to this.
Both measurements are with the monitors in stereo and so aren't intended for analysis as such. More so you can see the difference in the room response with the added treatment.
Sounds great in there. I've wound up the monitors and listened to few well known discs and it's really tight in the bottem end. Kick and bass are well defined and the stereo image is really nice. I'm glad I didn't go with the wider spacing I was toying around with early in the build. Soffit mounting and room treatment has made the image wide enough.
Adding a third layer of FI32 to the back wall, total 300mm and superchunking the rear corners, as well as putting a 200mm layer of FI 32 between the soffits has changed the room to this.
Both measurements are with the monitors in stereo and so aren't intended for analysis as such. More so you can see the difference in the room response with the added treatment.
Sounds great in there. I've wound up the monitors and listened to few well known discs and it's really tight in the bottem end. Kick and bass are well defined and the stereo image is really nice. I'm glad I didn't go with the wider spacing I was toying around with early in the build. Soffit mounting and room treatment has made the image wide enough.
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Thanks for taking a look at that data Stuart. I didn't see your most recent post before I put up those last couple of graphs, but in answer to your question:
I've uploaded my most recent REW data to dropbox if you've got time to take a look.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/416 ... tereo.mdat
Thanks again for your time and input. much appreciated
I've put in an extra layer of FI32 on the back wall , totalling 300mm, and also superchunked the rear corners. The front wall between the soffits now also has 200mm of FI32 in.Soundman2020 wrote:Are you planning on putting any more treatment in there (apart from the front wall)?
I've uploaded my most recent REW data to dropbox if you've got time to take a look.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/416 ... tereo.mdat
This seems to have remained a constant throughout all the testing and treatment I've done. I understand the concept of taking low frequencys out of the room, but how does one add them back in?Soundman2020 wrote:there's a "hole" around 125 Hz that might need some attention
Thanks again for your time and input. much appreciated
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
You already did it! Believe it or not, you put the energy back in to the room by taking energy out of the room.. Sounds weird, I know, but that's what you are doing in effect.This seems to have remained a constant throughout all the testing and treatment I've done. I understand the concept of taking low frequencys out of the room, but how does one add them back in?
The basic issue is this: you were looking at a null in a standing wave, but you were only seeing it because your mic was at that specific location in the room. At any other location, it would not have been in that null, but rather a "neutral" zone, or even the peak... for that specific frequency. A standing wave is called that because it ... well, it "stands": even though the wave is still there, and still moving through the room, the pattern of pressure peaks and pressure nulls that it creates is stationary with respect to the room boundary, so the wave appears to be standing still. Hence the name: "standing wave". In reality, it isn't actually stationary: it's only the patterns of pressure peaks and nulls that remains fixed, but the energy of that wave is still traveling around the room. So what you hear depends where you are in the room. Move the mic a bit and you'll be out of that null (and probably into a null for a different frequency). That's why it is so important to get the mic back to the exact same location each time you do a measurement in REW.
So, the energy of the wave is still moving around the room. For every null there is a corresponding peak, and since this is a room mode, the peak is located... in the corner of the room! All modes terminate in corners. So by treating the corner with thick absorption, you have damped the resonance of that mode: You brought down the peak, which also automatically brings up the null. Magic! The mode is still there, and still "standing", but now it is standing much more weakly, since it is damped. (And you also drove the frequency up a tad: it is now at about 131 Hz.) So you actually did, indeed, "fill in" the null by taking away some energy from that wave. But you took it away at the location where it is peaking, by damping its resonance.
It sounds totally illogical that you can treat an empty hole by apparently taking something out of it, but it make more sense when you realize that the "hole" is only part of the entire wave, and there's a corresponding peak somewhere else in the room, sort of the "other end" of the wave. So you are not actually "taking stuff out" of the hole, but rather "taking it out" of the peak, and that has an effect on the hole too.
Ain't acoustics wonderful? So intuitive, so logical, so clear...
Not sure if I managed to explain that clearly at all: Reading it back, I think I just confused myself, actually!
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
thanks Stuart. I read that once through but have to head out at the moment. I'll read it again maybe three, or four hundred times and i'm sure it'll make sense
The room is really sounding sweet though anyhow
The room is really sounding sweet though anyhow
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
For sure! I just read it over, and edited it a bit to see if I could make it a bit more clear.... but I don't think it helped much... I'm still confusing me with my own explanation!I'll read it again maybe three, or four hundred times and i'm sure it'll make sense
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
and believe it or not, I think I actually understand the conceptSoundman2020 wrote:You already did it! Believe it or not, you put the energy back in to the room by talking out of the room.. Sounds weird, I know, but that's what you are doing in effect.
The way I understand it in my head is that it's a smoothing effect. If you reduce the 'bell-shaped' peak curve of a frequency (via room treatment, corners especially), then the corresponding null (elsewhere in the room) recieves the same treatment, but in reverse. Thus making the null less 'nully' and the peak less 'peaky'. (I don't believe thats proper acoustic terminology ), and makes for a more even room response.
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Great thread stevev. It goes to show that proper room geometry, soffit mounting and generous absorption can make a smallish room sound like a big room.
I've made this thread a sticky
Cheers
john
I've made this thread a sticky
Cheers
john
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Thanks John, that's certainly put a grin on my faceJohn Sayers wrote:Great thread stevev. It goes to show that proper room geometry, soffit mounting and generous absorption can make a smallish room sound like a big room.
That's a great way to describe it too. It does sound like a bigger room than it is, that's for sure. I thought putting that much rear wall absorbtion in was overkill, but it really has been the make or break point for the control room.
And it bears saying again, that my build would have been nowhere near the quality it is without the information and input from this forum.
thanks to all
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Steve, just wondering if you have any final measurements on the amount of isolation that you ended up with? Did you hit your target of 65?.
It would also be great if you could add a few more photos of the rooms, so we can see how you did all of that.
But I'm really disappointed with this fast progress.... because it looks like I wont be getting that free trip to Aussie that you promised if the place isn't finished by the end of the year!!
Seriously, great job you have done here! Just like John said: You have proven, conclusively, that all his techniques and methods really do work as advertised. Not that there was any doubt, but it's great to see it all confirmed once again, with actual objective acoustic measurements.
Impressed, I am.
- Stuart -
It would also be great if you could add a few more photos of the rooms, so we can see how you did all of that.
But I'm really disappointed with this fast progress.... because it looks like I wont be getting that free trip to Aussie that you promised if the place isn't finished by the end of the year!!
Seriously, great job you have done here! Just like John said: You have proven, conclusively, that all his techniques and methods really do work as advertised. Not that there was any doubt, but it's great to see it all confirmed once again, with actual objective acoustic measurements.
Impressed, I am.
- Stuart -
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Thanks Stuart You're advice, encouragment and knowledge have been a huge part of pulling this all together and it's really appreciated. (it's probably appreciated by my neighbours as well, even though they don't know it, as they won't be hearing anything.)
So this is the front of the control room. The FI32 is 100mm thick on all surfaces except between the soffits, where it's 200mm thick. Putting that in between the soffits made a huge difference to the sound of the room. I started off at 100mm thick which made a considerable difference, but adding the second layer really nailed it.
Here's the back of the control room. 300mm thick with a 90mm air gap at the back wall, then superchunks extending out from that. The difference between having 200mm FI32 with no superchunks, and having 300mm with super chunks is amazing!!!
I'm also planning on making a 300mm FI32 removable insert for the doorway for mixing sessions.
And here's a couple of pics of some of the finishing fabric and timber that is going in at the moment.
A bit of advice for anyone who is doing any kind of fabric finish for walls ceilings etc....get an air stapler!!! This tip was passed on to me by my wife who used to work in scenic art. Standing on a ladder whilst trying to nicely tension fabric with one hand, and air staple with the other is hard enough. I can't imagine how tricky it would be with a manual stapler!!
I haven't got the internal access door built yet which makes a proper measurement difficult. Having said that, if I crank up a drum track and close the external access door and walk around the back of the studio I get a reading of around 60-65db TL. The other thing that's making it tricky to accurately measure is the outdoor ambient noise, ie birds, cars etc etc. I suppose that's a good thing if the ambient level and my output level are competing for the loudest volume at 1 meter away from the external shell. Perhaps I need to do a measurement at 3am to get a clearer level.Soundman2020 wrote:Steve, just wondering if you have any final measurements on the amount of isolation that you ended up with? Did you hit your target of 65?.
So this is the front of the control room. The FI32 is 100mm thick on all surfaces except between the soffits, where it's 200mm thick. Putting that in between the soffits made a huge difference to the sound of the room. I started off at 100mm thick which made a considerable difference, but adding the second layer really nailed it.
Here's the back of the control room. 300mm thick with a 90mm air gap at the back wall, then superchunks extending out from that. The difference between having 200mm FI32 with no superchunks, and having 300mm with super chunks is amazing!!!
I'm also planning on making a 300mm FI32 removable insert for the doorway for mixing sessions.
And here's a couple of pics of some of the finishing fabric and timber that is going in at the moment.
A bit of advice for anyone who is doing any kind of fabric finish for walls ceilings etc....get an air stapler!!! This tip was passed on to me by my wife who used to work in scenic art. Standing on a ladder whilst trying to nicely tension fabric with one hand, and air staple with the other is hard enough. I can't imagine how tricky it would be with a manual stapler!!
quick, cheap or good....pick any two.
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Very nice workmanship. The end is in sight! Not too far to go now.
One question: Where are the vents from your speaker soffits? I guess you are venting up through the top?
- Stuart -
One question: Where are the vents from your speaker soffits? I guess you are venting up through the top?
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
cheers Stuart.
The vents are a little hard to see in the above pic as the light glare makes the right hand vent almost invisible. You can just make out the left hand one as a circle at the top of the soffit. It's a tube of 100mm storm water pipe that will vent to the top.
The vents are a little hard to see in the above pic as the light glare makes the right hand vent almost invisible. You can just make out the left hand one as a circle at the top of the soffit. It's a tube of 100mm storm water pipe that will vent to the top.
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
Ahhh! OK, got it. Have you tested those, with the speakers running at high volume for a long period, to make sure they give you enough ventilation, and keep your speakers cool? Maybe I'm just paranoid about speaker cooling, but it seems that more cooling would be better.
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Re: Dog + Bear Studio build
I've certainly had them running just about all day (8+ hours) playing CD's while i've been working and have checked the air temp coming out of the vents. I'd say the air coming out of the vents is slightly warmer than than ambient room temp. I could probably lower down a thermometer on a string to get an idea of temp at the rear of the monitor just to be sure, but it seems like the air flow is sufficient.
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