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Please check the forum rules about posting images: They should NEVER be posted off-forum, at an "image host" or any other location.New post coming soon.. Just have to find an image host.
Smart move! Those are not your friends...trying to stay away from the big pipes shooting vertical through our space.
I would suggest going with a simpler design, since you are on a tight budget, and also since this is your first studio build. Just go with a plain rectangular shape for the room (but still keeping well away from those nasty pipes!). Any time you add extra walls, or splay them (angle them) you are adding complexity to the construction, and adding cost. Keep it as simple as possible, if you want to keep your costs down.Here are some sketchup SKETCHES. ... The black outlines on the floor are an extremely vague concept that I came up with
So I'd suggest going with very common and standard sized building materials: nothing fancy. Just stuff you can buy at any Home Depot, Lowes, or whatever other building supplies store you have nearby.With that said, we are still hoping to do "our best". We can spend around $5,000 and do ALL the work ourselves or by free labor from our large network of friends who are excited about the project. (Keeping in mind that we simply don't have the money for expensive things)
New console??? Now you got my attention... What did you guys get? (Make, model).I think in the end we will happy simply having the space treated well, clean proper AC power, and the ergonomics of the large space and our new console.
You could probably go a bit closer to those pipes if you wanted, and gain a bit more space. Any idea what those pipes are carrying? It might be worthwhile soffiting them in, if they are just thin-walled air ducts of some type, or if they are carrying something noisy. They will be inside your MSM cavity, so they won't be well isolated.That includes those pipes. Would you just make the interior framed EAST wall "inside" of those pipes? That would shrink our width from 14.86' to ~ 12'. Then we would subtract the framing materials for the WEST and EAST wall from that. ~ 11.21' x 29.44' <-- best case interior rectangle?
A couple of inches should be fine, but I'd check if they might be picking up any vibration form the rest of the building: borrow a stethoscope and listen to them, to see what you hear. If there's a lot of noise in those, then increase the distance a bit.Then I have to ask, how much space should be between these vertical cedar beams and "back" of our new stud walls?
See above! How much isolation do you need? With a single-leaf wall (such as that brick wall would be if you don't build a proper 2-leaf MSM system) then you are limited to a set of equations known as "mass law", which isn't very heartening... a single leaf wall places severe restrictions on how much isolation you can get at reasonable cost and in a reasonable space. Once you put up a second leaf next to it, then you move to an entirely different set of equations (because resonance is now a big part of the setup), which is a lot happier: you can get much higher levels of isolation with less total mass and in less total thickness (and less cost).My partner also wants me to confirm that we 'absolutely' need to build a framed wall inside of the brick (EAST) wall, as that surface is so beautiful! Is their a de-coupling system we could use to attach a 3 sided wall system to that brick?
IT complicates seals at the joints, it complicates acoustic prediction of how the room will behave, because the simplest acoustic equations only work for rectangular rooms with six sides (4 walls, 1 ceiling, 1 floor, all perpendicular to each other). Any shape other than a rectangle makes it exponentially harder to predict the acoustic response of the room in advance. Also, walls angled in the manner you show for the front of the room will act more or less like a concave lens for some frequencies, focusing them back into the room in patterns that are different for each frequency, so you'll have peaks and nulls in different parts of the room at different frequencies: there won't be any spot in the room that sounds the same as any other spot...When you say to get rid of the angles, I have to ask, why?
Ok, great, but are you also a skilled drywaller? Can you cut drywall panels accurately with angled beveled edges, then line them up perfectly, seal them, mud and tape them, while maintaining constant surface density and not cracking the panels? If so, then great. If not, then you have a problem... You don't need to be a skilled drywaller to if the room is rectangular with 90° angles everywhere. You do if there are any angles.I am a skilled carpenter by trade,
Wow! That's a pretty amazing console, at a total give-away price! Lucky guys!Console is an old analog broadcast beast from 1996. Wheatstone TV-1000. It's not a recording board but for $1,300 (including an entire backup board "for parts") we couldn't resist!
But those are supposed to be floor-mounted speakers! They probably can be flush mounted, but flush mounting speakers that were not designed for it introduces another st of challenges. Will you be using them as active speakers, with the amp modules in, or will you be using them as passives?I'm planning to build the Wilmslow Audio ATC SCM100 clones. I wanted to "flush-mount" them,
Ummmm... this may seem a little harsh, but I don't understand why you'd build a control room around one of the best consoles ever made (easily comparable to SSL or Neve), which probably cost a quarter to a half a million dollars when it was new, but then not set things as a usable control room, with proper layout and good acoustics? To my way of thinking, that's sort of like owning a Ferrari then fitting it with bicycle wheels, running it on castor oil, and only driving it up and down your garden path, while you use a Renault 5 to get around town!But keep in mind, this isn't a typical facility so our needs for monitor placement are odd. We desire to have our main sweet-spot be a basic DAW desk and the ATC clones (and maybe a "shit" reference pair too). The Equators placed over a table with a ton of synths and drum machines and the Genelecs placed on the meter bridge of the console....
With that monster console on the room but the room not set up correctly around it, there probably won't be any sweet spot. The console by itself is so large that it will modify the room acoustics just by being there. If the room is not set up symmetrically around that, then everything will suffer.IT IS NOT paramount to have the console in the "sweet spot"
Are you aware that the meter bridge is the worst possible place to set up monitors? Do you understand the reason why high-end studios do that? (Besides, the meter bridge on your console slopes backwards; it is not flat...)Genelecs placed on the meter bridge of the console
If the only reason you have it is to have some good pre-amps, a summing amp, and some basic mixing OTB functions, then why do you have it at all? Just buy a few pre-amps, a summing amp, and a small analog console, and rack them alongside your DAW.We bought it to have actual knobs for tracking, unity summing, and the occasional "dub mix".
OK, so you mix pretty much 100% ITB. So do many people these days. So then why do you have that amazing console when you won't even be using 10% of its functionality?Most of our critical edits, sound design, and mixing will be done with a mouse and I absolutely MUST have an ergonomic workflow.
Then dont! Set up the DAW properly , along with the console, and use both of them to their full capabilities. DAWS are strong in some areas, your console is string in others. They complement each other. But just using it as a glorified pre-amp shoved away over up against one wall doesn't make a lot of sense.Never could use a trackball sitting on a console.. tried, hate it.
Damn! Somebody pulled out of the deal? BUMMER! That must be really annoying!At this moment I'm afraid we are no longer pursuing this space.
To be honest, I really don't see it as wasted effort at all! I'm sure it will be useful for somebody, some day, when they are in a similar situation and find your thread.I'm sure its frustrating putting effort into so many un-resolved questions!