Okay, I DO have some questions to ask, but here is my situation.
We have budgeted roughly $25K to build a home studio/practice space. Locally, you can almost rent a house for what it costs to rent a place to practice in. It's crazy, and neither of them would be in a safe or secure area.
My dad (it is going in his back yard, that I am going to purchase) wants to go concrete filled concrete block. This is in a residential neighborhood. The back of the building would be about 50' from a high traffic two-lane city road. So soundproofing going in and out is an issue. I'm more worried about the sound of a Hard Rock/Metal band with live drums and loud amps disturbing the neighbors than other sounds coming in, but I figured sound transmission is a two-way street.
Mainly, this is going to be a practice space with a bathroom, and I would like to have a control room.
I probably would prefer a more acoustically dead environment for the actual band/recording room. I'm also wanting to work in some height so the drums have some space rather than an 8' ceiling. I'm sort of looking at a cross between the Big Facility, and a Garage studio 1.
Entrance/Foyer
Bathroom
Large Studio/Band room
Control Room
A small dead booth
A storage/electronics tinkering area.
So, where the heck do I begin?
Will plywood, OSB sheathing, or Hardie Board over 2"x4" (2"x6"?, 2"x8"?) stud walls work as well for me as concrete filled block for the exterior wall?
It will be on a concrete slab, that much I do know. The building will roughly be 24'x30'x??'(LxWxH.)
Thanks!
KTK's home studio/practice room.
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
Hi there "KTK9", and Welcome!
I had already written a long response to your original post, but then you deleted that before I could hit "submit", and started another thread with a different first post: I'm not going to waste my time replying to that one instead, only to find that you decided to delete it as well and do something different, so I'm just posting my original response below anyway, even though it no longer matches then new thread you started. Hopefully it will be of some use...
In the future, please do not modify or delete your posts after you make them, unless it is just for fixing spelling errors or some such minor details. Deleting an entire post while people might be working on responses to it is pretty ugly.
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So your first step should be to determine how much isolation you need, in decibels. To do that. you'll need a sound level meter.
It would be unusual to have a dead tracking room, but if that's what you want, there's no problem. Most tracking rooms are pretty live, which is sort of why they are often referred to as "live rooms", but if you wanted your live room to be dead in order to be different from everyone else, that can be done fairly easily.
That would be unusual.
If you want a dead room, and a control room, and an iso booth, and a bathroom, that's four rooms, not one. It certainly is possible to do that in 720 ft2. I have designed several places like that, so it can be done. Bt I would suggest not trying to make the dead room and control room into one single space, as that means it would not be optimal for either purpose. Either it would be lousy for mixing and good for tracking, or lousy for tracking but good for mixing. Or maybe lousy for both: one thing it will not be, is good for both.
When you figure out the size of the tracking room, you'll need to take into consideration that making it dead is going to need a lot of treatment, so you'll need to allow several extra inches on each side for the treatment panels.
- Stuart -
I had already written a long response to your original post, but then you deleted that before I could hit "submit", and started another thread with a different first post: I'm not going to waste my time replying to that one instead, only to find that you decided to delete it as well and do something different, so I'm just posting my original response below anyway, even though it no longer matches then new thread you started. Hopefully it will be of some use...
In the future, please do not modify or delete your posts after you make them, unless it is just for fixing spelling errors or some such minor details. Deleting an entire post while people might be working on responses to it is pretty ugly.
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That's 25k for 720 square feet, which works out to about US$ 38 per square foot. I'm not sure what construction costs are like in Florida, but that sounds to be rather on the low side. To find out for sure, call around a few local building contractors and find out what their typical rate is for building a stand-alone out building, such as a home theater, self contained apartment, or music room. I'm betting that the rate will be a bit more than US$ 38/ft2. You might need to either shrink your floor area, or increase your budget.We have budgeted roughly $25K to build a home studio/practice space. ... The building will roughly be 24'x30'
If he is just about the outer leaf, then that would be fine, but if he is thinking of doing only a single-leaf building, then I would discourage that. Single-leaf is generally not a good way to isolate a studio, because you need so much mass to make it work for high isolation levels. For example, if it turns out that you need only 50 dB of isolation, you'd have to have a surface density of about 400 kg/m2 (roughly 80lb/ft2) of wall area. In other words, each square foot of your wall, including the doors, windows, roof, and everything else, would have to weight about 80 lbs. To get that, you would need to make the entire building of about 7" of reinforced concrete (not concrete-filled block: proper reinforced concrete). If you needed 60 dB of isolation, you'd have to increase that to 1500 kg/m2 (300 lb/m2), meaning that your solid reinforced concrete wall now needs to be over 26" thick.My dad (it is going on property he owns that I am going to purchase) wants to go concrete filled concrete block.
So your first step should be to determine how much isolation you need, in decibels. To do that. you'll need a sound level meter.
What type of traffic? Just cars, or also lots of heavy vehicles, such as buses, and trucks? Is it just noise, or do you also feel vibrations in the ground?The back of the building would be about 20' from a high traffic two-lane city road.
Not a problem. That is related to treatment, not isolation. They are two entirely different things. Isolation is what you do to keep sound in/out. Treatment is what you do to make the room sound the way you want. They involve very different materials and techniques.I probably would prefer a more acoustically dead environment for the actual band/recording room.
It would be unusual to have a dead tracking room, but if that's what you want, there's no problem. Most tracking rooms are pretty live, which is sort of why they are often referred to as "live rooms", but if you wanted your live room to be dead in order to be different from everyone else, that can be done fairly easily.
Now I'm confused! Yes, drums certainly do sound better in rooms with high ceilings, which gives them a nice open, airy, live feeling. But you say you want your live room to be dead, which is the opposite of an open, airy sound! It's the sound that you normally get in a "live" room, not a dead room. Dead is dead: No airiness, no openness, no sizzle, just dry, dead, and lifeless, with very short decay times. So it's confusing that you want a high ceiling in order to get good drum sounds, but that you also want the room to be dead. Maybe you could explain that a bit more?I'm also wanting to work in some height so the drums have some space
That would be unusual.
Confusion here too: you say you want a dead room and a control room, but then you say you want only one room. If it is dead, then it cannot also be used as a control room, since control rooms must be neutral, not dead. There is a very specific set of acoustic parameters that a control room needs to meet, and if you make the room dead then it cannot meet any of them.I only need 1 studio room. and perhaps a small booth.
If you want a dead room, and a control room, and an iso booth, and a bathroom, that's four rooms, not one. It certainly is possible to do that in 720 ft2. I have designed several places like that, so it can be done. Bt I would suggest not trying to make the dead room and control room into one single space, as that means it would not be optimal for either purpose. Either it would be lousy for mixing and good for tracking, or lousy for tracking but good for mixing. Or maybe lousy for both: one thing it will not be, is good for both.
Start by buying a decent quality sound level meter, and use it to determine how much isolation you need, in decibels. Based on that, you can decide on the construction materials and techniques that will get you that level of isolation. Then you can determine how much space you want to allocated to each room, roughly, and look for an arrangement of rooms that fits that and makes good sense in terms of traffic flow, access paths, sight lines, and other purely functional issues. Then you'll need to decide on what design philosophy you want to use for your control room (EG, RFZ, CID, NER, MR, etc.) and do the layout and geometry of the room accordingly. Then adjust the sizes of the other rooms around that. Then add the correct treatment for each room, to get the response you want. Then add your HVAC system, which is a critical part of any studio, and takes a lot of planning to get right. Then figure out your doors and windows, and the electrical system. Then optimize and refine the design. That's it!So, where the heck do I begin?
When you figure out the size of the tracking room, you'll need to take into consideration that making it dead is going to need a lot of treatment, so you'll need to allow several extra inches on each side for the treatment panels.
That depends on how you design the wall system! A wall is not just some building materials that you put together. In acoustics, a wall is a complete system, and all of the parts act together in certain ways that can be predicted and calculated. That's why you first need to know how much isolation you need, so you can choose a system that will provide that level of isolation. There's a whole process here, with many calculations that you'll need to do, to make sure that your wall design will meet the goals you set. If you just guess, then chances are really good that you will get it wrong. Either your wall won't isolate enough, in which case you will have wasted a lot of time and money on something that doesn't work, or you will have more isolation than you need, in which case you will have wasted a lot of time and money on all those extra materials and labor that you didn't need. Either way, you lose. That's why you need to plan it and design it right.Will a plywood or OSB sheathing over 2"x4" (2"x6"?, 2"x8"?) stud walls work as well for me as concrete filled block for the outer wall?
Excellent! Monolithic slab on grade? Or done as separate foundations and slab?It will be on a concrete slab, that much I do know.
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
Hi Stuart,Soundman2020 wrote:Hi there "KTK9", and Welcome!
I had already written a long response to your original post, but then you deleted that before I could hit "submit", and started another thread with a different first post: I'm not going to waste my time replying to that one instead, only to find that you decided to delete it as well and do something different, so I'm just posting my original response below anyway, even though it no longer matches then new thread you started. Hopefully it will be of some use...
In the future, please do not modify or delete your posts after you make them, unless it is just for fixing spelling errors or some such minor details. Deleting an entire post while people might be working on responses to it is pretty ugly.
Thanks for responding.
Sorry about moving the post. After I'd read through a few other posts, I thought that perhaps I should put this in the Design forum rather than Studio Construction since this is the Design stage.
That's 25k for 720 square feet, which works out to about US$ 38 per square foot. I'm not sure what construction costs are like in Florida, but that sounds to be rather on the low side. To find out for sure, call around a few local building contractors and find out what their typical rate is for building a stand-alone out building, such as a home theater, self contained apartment, or music room. I'm betting that the rate will be a bit more than US$ 38/ft2. You might need to either shrink your floor area, or increase your budget.
Well, I can do much of the work myself. I'm going to college, and help my dad take care of my mom part of the time - she has dementia. I'm in my late 40's, and have worked in virtually every phase of construction from pouring slabs to painting, trim & cabinetry, plumbing, and electricity. I worked in all those various fields so I could gain those skills.
I'm going to act as the Contractor on it, and hire subcontractors to do some of the work, and some of it I will do myself.
The Concrete filled block is simply for the outer leaf. I already have a dB Meter.If he is just about the outer leaf, then that would be fine, but if he is thinking of doing only a single-leaf building, then I would discourage that. Single-leaf is generally not a good way to isolate a studio, because you need so much mass to make it work for high isolation levels. For example, if it turns out that you need only 50 dB of isolation, you'd have to have a surface density of about 400 kg/m2 (roughly 80lb/ft2) of wall area. In other words, each square foot of your wall, including the doors, windows, roof, and everything else, would have to weight about 80 lbs. To get that, you would need to make the entire building of about 7" of reinforced concrete (not concrete-filled block: proper reinforced concrete). If you needed 60 dB of isolation, you'd have to increase that to 1500 kg/m2 (300 lb/m2), meaning that your solid reinforced concrete wall now needs to be over 26" thick.
So your first step should be to determine how much isolation you need, in decibels. To do that. you'll need a sound level meter.
The question I have is, how do I figure out how much isolation I need when I don't have a source yet??(i.e., since there is no building yet.)
It's just road noise from cars, trucks, buses. Vibrations are not really an issue. There is a 15' wide ditch/creek and a sidewalk between the road and the back of the property.What type of traffic? Just cars, or also lots of heavy vehicles, such as buses, and trucks? Is it just noise, or do you also feel vibrations in the ground?
I want the ceiling higher for putting mic's up above the kit, and because the low roof tends to make it kind of box-like. I want the room fairly large, but very little reverberation. If I had my way I'd make the inside ceilings 20' high, but that's cost prohibitive. We had a room before, that we soundproofed when I was 18 and the walls were 16" thick (Brick exteriorwall, then a 2x4" wall covered with 3/4" plywood then an airspace filled with rolled insulation batts, then a 2x4" wall covered with sheetrock, and then a set of 1"x2" horizontal wooden strips covering the walls every 18" with 18"wx24"l plush carpet tiles layered up the wall.Not a problem. That is related to treatment, not isolation. They are two entirely different things. Isolation is what you do to keep sound in/out. Treatment is what you do to make the room sound the way you want. They involve very different materials and techniques.I probably would prefer a more acoustically dead environment for the actual band/recording room.
It would be unusual to have a dead tracking room, but if that's what you want, there's no problem. Most tracking rooms are pretty live, which is sort of why they are often referred to as "live rooms", but if you wanted your live room to be dead in order to be different from everyone else, that can be done fairly easily.
Now I'm confused! Yes, drums certainly do sound better in rooms with high ceilings, which gives them a nice open, airy, live feeling. But you say you want your live room to be dead, which is the opposite of an open, airy sound! It's the sound that you normally get in a "live" room, not a dead room. Dead is dead: No airiness, no openness, no sizzle, just dry, dead, and lifeless, with very short decay times. So it's confusing that you want a high ceiling in order to get good drum sounds, but that you also want the room to be dead. Maybe you could explain that a bit more?I'm also wanting to work in some height so the drums have some space
That would be unusual.
Confusion here too: you say you want a dead room and a control room, but then you say you want only one room. If it is dead, then it cannot also be used as a control room, since control rooms must be neutral, not dead. There is a very specific set of acoustic parameters that a control room needs to meet, and if you make the room dead then it cannot meet any of them.I only need 1 studio room. and perhaps a small booth.
If you want a dead room, and a control room, and an iso booth, and a bathroom, that's four rooms, not one. It certainly is possible to do that in 720 ft2. I have designed several places like that, so it can be done. Bt I would suggest not trying to make the dead room and control room into one single space, as that means it would not be optimal for either purpose. Either it would be lousy for mixing and good for tracking, or lousy for tracking but good for mixing. Or maybe lousy for both: one thing it will not be, is good for both.
That does seem confusing, doesn't it. LOL
The priority is the Dead Studio room as a band room, so the actual "Isolation" needed is to keep the drums and band from disturbing the neighbors. I can worry about building the actual control room at a later time.
The Bathroom, and all the rest of that do not have to be Isolated immediately.
There will not be a glass window between the "studio" and control room. I'll probably use video monitors and cameras if it ever comes to that. This is not going to be open for business, this is my own project studio - mainly for my own entertainment.
Monolithic slab on a grade most likely, we haven't discussed it yet.Excellent! Monolithic slab on grade? Or done as separate foundations and slab?
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
Great! At a very rough guess, that should knock off about 20% to 30% of the total costs. But you should still call around local contractors to get a realistic "per square foot" rate for your area, then knock 30% off that. Most people who come to this forum underestimate the cost of building their studios, sometimes by large factors. Most people don't realize that there are major differences between building a house and building a studio, in all aspects, that increase the costs.have worked in virtually every phase of construction from pouring slabs to painting, trim & cabinetry, plumbing, and electricity.
It would be very sad if you were to set aside 25 k to do the entire studio, then see 5k go on the slab, another 5k on the HVAC system, 10k on outer-leaf walls, 5 k on the roof, then there is nothing left to build the actual studio inside the shell that you made. That's when you realize that you needed a bigger budget, or a smaller footprint. Realistically, in most places around the USA, a ground-up build is going to cost you upwards of US$ 100 per square foot if you hire contractors to do it all, and maybe US$ 60 and up if you do all or part of the work yourself. That's what most people seem to be paying these days. Hence the warning. Don't make the very depressing mistake of under-budgeting your place. The forum is littered with sad stories like that, of studios that ended up half-built because the owner ran out of money.
Great! Then you can get good isolation for your place.The Concrete filled block is simply for the outer leaf.
Excellent! Set it to "C" weighting and "Slow" response for all of your testing.I already have a dB Meter.
You are the source!The question I have is, how do I figure out how much isolation I need when I don't have a source yet??
You need to do two things with your sound level meter:
1) Measure how loud you are when you are doing what you will typically do in the completed studio. It does not matter where you measure that: get your band together, and get them to jam some place like they normally would, while you measure the sound pressure level in and around the band with the meter. Get them to play several songs, as loud as they can, and you measure in a few places right in the middle and just around the band as they play. Note down the highest level that you see on the meter, and also the estimated average level that you see while they are playing the loudest song.
2) Measure the typical, ambient sound level at the place where the studio will be built, at the quietest time of day (probably very late at night, when there is little or no traffic on the road). Take several measurements all around your yard, and note down the LOWEST measurement that you see on your meter.
Subtract the lowest from the highest: That is how much isolation you need.
There might be a third factor that you need to incorporate: get a copy of the noise regulations that apply to your area. You can probably find that on the website of your local municipality. If the legal limit is lower than your lowest measurement, then use the legal limit instead. For example,if you measured 45 dB as the lowest real ambient level, but the law says 40 dB, then 40 dB is what you use.
Very true, but that is due to reflections from the ceiling causing phase cancellations and comb filtering at the mic tip, with low ceilings. That's why drums never record well in rooms with low ceilings, regardless of how the room sounds otherwise. But that isn't related to the boxy sound: those are two very different things. The boxy sound is due to one of two possibilities: 1) A room that is very small (in addition to the low ceiling). 2) A room that is over-treated with absorption.I want the ceiling higher for putting mic's up above the kit, and because the low roof tends to make it kind of box-like.
Another word for a "boxy" sounding room is a "dead" room.
If you build a big room with high ceilings, then make it dead by treating it with enough absorption to make it non-reverberant, then you will have that exact same "boxy" sound again, regardless of ceiling height.I want the room fairly large, but very little reverberation.
If you did that, there would not be much point to making the room big in the first place, because making it dead will make it sound exactly like a small room again.
It is impossible to make a very small room sound like a big room, but it is easy to make a big room sound like a very small room: all you have to do is to treat it heavily, so that it has very short reverb times.
If you record bands and instruments on a dead room, they will sound sort of flat, small, dull, and muted. Lifeless.
Most commercial facilities have both a live room and also a dead room. The live room is large, and has long decay times. That's where they record bands and instruments that need to sound large, spacious, airy. Dead rooms are often used for things like vocals, voice overs, Foley, ADR, and things like that where no room sound at all is wanted, as the correct ambient effects will be added later. Eg, if you want the sound of water dripping in stone dungeon, then record water dripping in a dead Foley room, and add the "stone dungeon" sound later. If you tried to add "stone dungeon" to sound that already had a different room sound signature built in, then it would not sound like a convincing stone dungeon. Ditto for ADR, some vocal recordings, and a few other things. For ADR, if the actor is supposed to be in a living room, but your tracking room sounds like a bathroom, it ain't gonna work! You need a dead room (or at least a neutral room) for that. But most instruments do not sound good when recorded in a dead room.
Back in the 70's there was a design concept for control rooms called "LEDE", meaning Live-End, Dead-End" where opposite ends of the room were treated very differently, as the name replies. The concept was later heavily modified, since people found it uncomfortable, unnatural and fatiguing to work in such rooms. The "dead" sound was not pleasant.
So I'd really urge you to NOT have your main room as a dead room, unless you have a very specific reason for that. It won't work well for rehearsal, as musicians do not like "dead" sounds, and it won't work well for tracking, since most instruments sound terrible when recorded in very dead acoustic environments. They just sound "thin", "small", and "lifeless".
Of course, it's your choice how you build your studio, but I'm not aware of any professional studio where the main tracking room is acoustically dead.
That's a three-leaf wall. Unfortunately you wasted a lot of time, money and interior room space doing it that way. You cold have gotten better isolation from a properly designed 2-leaf wall, using fewer materials, costing less, building it faster, and leaving more free space inside the room.We had a room before, that we soundproofed when I was 18 and the walls were 16" thick (Brick exteriorwall, then a 2x4" wall covered with 3/4" plywood then an airspace filled with rolled insulation batts, then a 2x4" wall covered with sheetrock,
It's a common misconception that: "If two walls is good for isolation, then three must be better". That is not true. In fact, the opposite is true: three walls gives worse isolation than two walls, all other factors being equal.
That would have made the room sound rather dull, and "honky". Carpet does the opposite of what small rooms need. Carpet absorbs highs very well, mids not so much, and lows not at all. No effect. What small rooms need is lots of absorption in the lows, controlled absorption/diffusion in the mids, and no absorption at all in the highs. Often, reflection is needed in the highs, since many treated studios over-absorb that. Carpet has very little use, acoustically. (Except for acoustic carpet, which is something different entirely...)plush carpet tiles layered up the wall.
That is two different things: There is no relationship between how well a room isolates and how dead it sounds. You can have a very well isolated room that sounds very live.... or very dead. And you can have a poorly isolated room that sounds very live... or very dead. Isolation and treatment are two totally separate facets of acoustics. They both need to be taken into consideration when designing a studio, of course, and they can affect each other to a certain extent, but in reality there's no relationship between the two. Isolation is one thing, and treatment is another.The priority is the Dead Studio room as a band room, so the actual "Isolation" needed is to keep the drums and band from disturbing the neighbors.
Actually, that isn't true. You need to design the entire facility to work together from the start, and you need to at least build the isolation system, even if you don't complete the room interior and room treatment until later. Trying to design and build just part of the studio now, without any consideration as to how the rest will be built, is a recipe for disaster. For example, how would you decide on what HVAC system you need if you have not yet designed the control room and iso booth?I can worry about building the actual control room at a later time.
In reality, they do not need to be isolated at all! They will be outside of the isolation shell for the studio, so they won't need any isolation. Bathroom, lobby, offices, storage rooms, green rooms, etc. are not part of the acoustic area of the studio: they are service areas, and therefore can be built the same way as they would be in a typical house, office, school, shop, etc. They need no additional isolation. It is only the rooms that are part of the studio itself that need to be kept within the isolation shell.The Bathroom, and all the rest of that do not have to be Isolated immediately.
Any reason for that? Fully enclosed rooms with no windows at all can be uncomfortable to work in for long periods.}}There will not be a glass window between the "studio" and control room.
Great! that's the best way to go for that type of building, unless you do need vibration isolation as well, or extremely high levels of isolation between rooms.Monolithic slab on a grade most likely,
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
OK, so let me rework this. What I am most interested in at the start, is the isolated room to play in.Soundman2020 wrote:Great! At a very rough guess, that should knock off about 20% to 30% of the total costs. But you should still call around local contractors to get a realistic "per square foot" rate for your area, then knock 30% off that. Most people who come to this forum underestimate the cost of building their studios, sometimes by large factors. Most people don't realize that there are major differences between building a house and building a studio, in all aspects, that increase the costs.have worked in virtually every phase of construction from pouring slabs to painting, trim & cabinetry, plumbing, and electricity.
It would be very sad if you were to set aside 25 k to do the entire studio, then see 5k go on the slab, another 5k on the HVAC system, 10k on outer-leaf walls, 5 k on the roof, then there is nothing left to build the actual studio inside the shell that you made. That's when you realize that you needed a bigger budget, or a smaller footprint. Realistically, in most places around the USA, a ground-up build is going to cost you upwards of US$ 100 per square foot if you hire contractors to do it all, and maybe US$ 60 and up if you do all or part of the work yourself. That's what most people seem to be paying these days. Hence the warning. Don't make the very depressing mistake of under-budgeting your place. The forum is littered with sad stories like that, of studios that ended up half-built because the owner ran out of money.
Great! Then you can get good isolation for your place.The Concrete filled block is simply for the outer leaf.
Excellent! Set it to "C" weighting and "Slow" response for all of your testing.I already have a dB Meter.
You are the source!The question I have is, how do I figure out how much isolation I need when I don't have a source yet??
You need to do two things with your sound level meter:
1) Measure how loud you are when you are doing what you will typically do in the completed studio. It does not matter where you measure that: get your band together, and get them to jam some place like they normally would, while you measure the sound pressure level in and around the band with the meter. Get them to play several songs, as loud as they can, and you measure in a few places right in the middle and just around the band as they play. Note down the highest level that you see on the meter, and also the estimated average level that you see while they are playing the loudest song.
2) Measure the typical, ambient sound level at the place where the studio will be built, at the quietest time of day (probably very late at night, when there is little or no traffic on the road). Take several measurements all around your yard, and note down the LOWEST measurement that you see on your meter.
Subtract the lowest from the highest: That is how much isolation you need.
There might be a third factor that you need to incorporate: get a copy of the noise regulations that apply to your area. You can probably find that on the website of your local municipality. If the legal limit is lower than your lowest measurement, then use the legal limit instead. For example,if you measured 45 dB as the lowest real ambient level, but the law says 40 dB, then 40 dB is what you use.
Very true, but that is due to reflections from the ceiling causing phase cancellations and comb filtering at the mic tip, with low ceilings. That's why drums never record well in rooms with low ceilings, regardless of how the room sounds otherwise. But that isn't related to the boxy sound: those are two very different things. The boxy sound is due to one of two possibilities: 1) A room that is very small (in addition to the low ceiling). 2) A room that is over-treated with absorption.I want the ceiling higher for putting mic's up above the kit, and because the low roof tends to make it kind of box-like.
Another word for a "boxy" sounding room is a "dead" room.
If you build a big room with high ceilings, then make it dead by treating it with enough absorption to make it non-reverberant, then you will have that exact same "boxy" sound again, regardless of ceiling height.I want the room fairly large, but very little reverberation.
If you did that, there would not be much point to making the room big in the first place, because making it dead will make it sound exactly like a small room again.
It is impossible to make a very small room sound like a big room, but it is easy to make a big room sound like a very small room: all you have to do is to treat it heavily, so that it has very short reverb times.
If you record bands and instruments on a dead room, they will sound sort of flat, small, dull, and muted. Lifeless.
Most commercial facilities have both a live room and also a dead room. The live room is large, and has long decay times. That's where they record bands and instruments that need to sound large, spacious, airy. Dead rooms are often used for things like vocals, voice overs, Foley, ADR, and things like that where no room sound at all is wanted, as the correct ambient effects will be added later. Eg, if you want the sound of water dripping in stone dungeon, then record water dripping in a dead Foley room, and add the "stone dungeon" sound later. If you tried to add "stone dungeon" to sound that already had a different room sound signature built in, then it would not sound like a convincing stone dungeon. Ditto for ADR, some vocal recordings, and a few other things. For ADR, if the actor is supposed to be in a living room, but your tracking room sounds like a bathroom, it ain't gonna work! You need a dead room (or at least a neutral room) for that. But most instruments do not sound good when recorded in a dead room.
Back in the 70's there was a design concept for control rooms called "LEDE", meaning Live-End, Dead-End" where opposite ends of the room were treated very differently, as the name replies. The concept was later heavily modified, since people found it uncomfortable, unnatural and fatiguing to work in such rooms. The "dead" sound was not pleasant.
So I'd really urge you to NOT have your main room as a dead room, unless you have a very specific reason for that. It won't work well for rehearsal, as musicians do not like "dead" sounds, and it won't work well for tracking, since most instruments sound terrible when recorded in very dead acoustic environments. They just sound "thin", "small", and "lifeless".
Of course, it's your choice how you build your studio, but I'm not aware of any professional studio where the main tracking room is acoustically dead.
That's a three-leaf wall. Unfortunately you wasted a lot of time, money and interior room space doing it that way. You cold have gotten better isolation from a properly designed 2-leaf wall, using fewer materials, costing less, building it faster, and leaving more free space inside the room.We had a room before, that we soundproofed when I was 18 and the walls were 16" thick (Brick exteriorwall, then a 2x4" wall covered with 3/4" plywood then an airspace filled with rolled insulation batts, then a 2x4" wall covered with sheetrock,
It's a common misconception that: "If two walls is good for isolation, then three must be better". That is not true. In fact, the opposite is true: three walls gives worse isolation than two walls, all other factors being equal.
That would have made the room sound rather dull, and "honky". Carpet does the opposite of what small rooms need. Carpet absorbs highs very well, mids not so much, and lows not at all. No effect. What small rooms need is lots of absorption in the lows, controlled absorption/diffusion in the mids, and no absorption at all in the highs. Often, reflection is needed in the highs, since many treated studios over-absorb that. Carpet has very little use, acoustically. (Except for acoustic carpet, which is something different entirely...)plush carpet tiles layered up the wall.
That is two different things: There is no relationship between how well a room isolates and how dead it sounds. You can have a very well isolated room that sounds very live.... or very dead. And you can have a poorly isolated room that sounds very live... or very dead. Isolation and treatment are two totally separate facets of acoustics. They both need to be taken into consideration when designing a studio, of course, and they can affect each other to a certain extent, but in reality there's no relationship between the two. Isolation is one thing, and treatment is another.The priority is the Dead Studio room as a band room, so the actual "Isolation" needed is to keep the drums and band from disturbing the neighbors.
Actually, that isn't true. You need to design the entire facility to work together from the start, and you need to at least build the isolation system, even if you don't complete the room interior and room treatment until later. Trying to design and build just part of the studio now, without any consideration as to how the rest will be built, is a recipe for disaster. For example, how would you decide on what HVAC system you need if you have not yet designed the control room and iso booth?I can worry about building the actual control room at a later time.
In reality, they do not need to be isolated at all! They will be outside of the isolation shell for the studio, so they won't need any isolation. Bathroom, lobby, offices, storage rooms, green rooms, etc. are not part of the acoustic area of the studio: they are service areas, and therefore can be built the same way as they would be in a typical house, office, school, shop, etc. They need no additional isolation. It is only the rooms that are part of the studio itself that need to be kept within the isolation shell.The Bathroom, and all the rest of that do not have to be Isolated immediately.
Any reason for that? Fully enclosed rooms with no windows at all can be uncomfortable to work in for long periods.}}There will not be a glass window between the "studio" and control room.
Great! that's the best way to go for that type of building, unless you do need vibration isolation as well, or extremely high levels of isolation between rooms.Monolithic slab on a grade most likely,
- Stuart -
We're discussing building a concrete-filled block building for me to build a studio in.
Roughly 75% of the building is going to be available for me to use as a studio, I do need some storage and bathroom area, and the entrance to the control room and the studio would be through this area. I am wiling to lose up to 6" in each direction (i.e., a 6" void or gap) between the leaves of the recording room.
I'm going to work up a basic idea, I DL'd smartdraw, so I'll mess with that some to give you an idea as to what I am looking at doing.
As far as my lack of windows, I figured it was cheaper and more secure having no windows in it.
The local Noise Pollution Ordinance says that essentially, nothing can be louder than 55dbA at night and 65dBA during the day - measured at the property line. So I need to be under that.
http://www.coj.net/departments/regulato ... ule-4.aspx
I definitely want to be in compliance. I don't want to disturb the neighbors, but I would like to be able to pursue my hobby at the same time. I mean, I can buy a HUD house (A house that was foreclosed open and taken back by the government backed lenders) somewhere for the amount of money I'm going to spend on this building, and I could just soundproof that... I have been considering that, actually.... it may even be cheaper to gut and isolate an entire house.(I.e, literally just leave the shell standing, and remove all the inside, and build a HUGE isolated room inside, like a 30'x40' room.)
Thanks!
KTK9
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
I went on Youtube and watched some studios being built, it is definitely interesting. One that caught my eye was a guy who built one in his garage using concrete blocks filled with masonry sand.
Locally, concrete blocks are going for $1.37 each for a normal 8"x8"x16".
I am trying to understand the concept of leaves. If you keep making a wall thicker, say concrete with 2x4's mounted directly to it, with drywall, is that still considered one leaf? Or would that be two leaves?
Locally, concrete blocks are going for $1.37 each for a normal 8"x8"x16".
I am trying to understand the concept of leaves. If you keep making a wall thicker, say concrete with 2x4's mounted directly to it, with drywall, is that still considered one leaf? Or would that be two leaves?
KTK9
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
There is at least one thread, probably in a sticky, on the forum (that I cannot find at the moment of course) that provides good detail on wall leaves. Here is the link to one description on John Sayer's main site about wall construction johnlsayers.com/Recmanual/Titles/Acoustics3.htm. There is a nice diagram that shows walls and leaves on here as well.KTK9 wrote:I went on Youtube and watched some studios being built, it is definitely interesting. One that caught my eye was a guy who built one in his garage using concrete blocks filled with masonry sand.
Locally, concrete blocks are going for $1.37 each for a normal 8"x8"x16".
I am trying to understand the concept of leaves. If you keep making a wall thicker, say concrete with 2x4's mounted directly to it, with drywall, is that still considered one leaf? Or would that be two leaves?
As to your question, I stand to be corrected by the experts, but, if you mean that you have a filled masonry wall then 2x4 attached as studs on 16", 24", or whatever center spacing and then you have wallboard attached to the studs, you have a 2 leaf wall. There is an 3 1/2" airspace between the wall board and the masonry, except where the studs are, of course. From outside in: masonry - 3 1/2 air gap - wallboard, is this what you mean? This is much like a standard residential wall where one leaf is concrete and the other is wallboard.
Two places where you could improve on this wall are in mechanically decoupling the inner (wallboard) and outer (masonry) leaf and/or increasing the air gap. The first means that the 2x4's should not be attached to the masonry. Any "hard" contact between the structures of the inner and outer leaves is a flanking path. The second is to increase the air gap. Happily, decoupling the two leaves generally means moving the inner leaf inwards (or the outer outwards), which means that the gap naturally is made larger. The amount is dependent on how much room you have to work with, of course. The acoustics theory behind this are, I believe, described by the "mass law."
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
ABitAnalog wrote:
As to your question, I stand to be corrected by the experts, but, if you mean that you have a filled masonry wall then 2x4 attached as studs on 16", 24", or whatever center spacing and then you have wallboard attached to the studs, you have a 2 leaf wall. There is an 3 1/2" airspace between the wall board and the masonry, except where the studs are, of course. From outside in: masonry - 3 1/2 air gap - wallboard, is this what you mean? This is much like a standard residential wall where one leaf is concrete and the other is wallboard.
So as long as there is no "gap", it is still one leaf? that is what I am trying to understand. If I took the concrete block and nailed sheets of plywood directly to it via some type of adhesive and nails then keep tacking layer after layer of drywall to it - making sure to seal and stagger their seams - then it would be one really thick Leaf?
But if I tack it to is and there is an air gap or cavity - such as in a standard 2x4" wall - it becomes two leaves?
I just want to make sure I am understanding this correctly, because I want to be able to play drums full blast in the middle of the night.... which means I'm going to need some serious Isolation.
Two places where you could improve on this wall are in mechanically decoupling the inner (wallboard) and outer (masonry) leaf and/or increasing the air gap. The first means that the 2x4's should not be attached to the masonry. Any "hard" contact between the structures of the inner and outer leaves is a flanking path. The second is to increase the air gap. Happily, decoupling the two leaves generally means moving the inner leaf inwards (or the outer outwards), which means that the gap naturally is made larger. The amount is dependent on how much room you have to work with, of course. The acoustics theory behind this are, I believe, described by the "mass law."
OK, I think I'm understanding this correctly.
Thanks!
KTK9
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
Yes, if there is no gap it is one leaf.
However, simply adding drywall or plywood to a concrete block wall will do very little to increase its isolation - you need to DOUBLE the mass to gain about 5db of noise reduction. You're better off using those sheets on the inner leaf. Several layers of thick drywall will be necessary, and you can use a product called green glue to stick the sheets together which greatly increases the effectiveness of that leaf.
However, simply adding drywall or plywood to a concrete block wall will do very little to increase its isolation - you need to DOUBLE the mass to gain about 5db of noise reduction. You're better off using those sheets on the inner leaf. Several layers of thick drywall will be necessary, and you can use a product called green glue to stick the sheets together which greatly increases the effectiveness of that leaf.
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Re: KTK's home studio/practice room.
The answer is "yes"... ! Sorry to be cryptic, but acoustics often doesn't work out neatly and cleanly, with sharply defined boundaries. It is often a case of several things happening at once, and trying to figure out which are positive, which are negative, and what the overall result is.I am trying to understand the concept of leaves. If you keep making a wall thicker, say concrete with 2x4's mounted directly to it, with drywall, is that still considered one leaf? Or would that be two leaves?
What you describe would be a "fully coupled two-leaf wall", technically. It is "two leaf" because you have an air gap in it. Any time you have an air gap with massive "things" on both sides, you have two leaves, so your concrete here is one leaf, and the drywall is the other leaf. From one point of view, it is the air gap that creates the "leaf" system, and it is the air gap that causes the resonance. But this system is also "fully coupled", as ABitAnalog pointed out, because the drywall is direct connected to the concrete through the studs. That creates a direct "flanking path" for vibration to move from drywall to concrete, or from concrete to drywall.
So you have two systems going on at once here... One is resonant, caused by the leaves and the air gap, while the other is purely mechanical, caused by the direct connection.
So the question is: How much of "whatever" is each doing, and what does that mean?
That's where the line gets a little blurry... It depends on mass and flanking and resonance and damping and rigidity and coincidence and coupling and a few other things...
In this case, you have a huge mass in the concrete wall, and a relatively very tiny mass in the drywall: concrete is about three to four times more dense than drywall anyway, and the concrete is many inches thick, vs. less than an inch for the drywall, so from a pure mass point of view, the concrete is doing an awful lot more than the drywall. Do the "Mass Law" math for both, and you'll see how that stacks up.
So the "coupling" here would not be that significant either. Yes, there's a major huge direct path between the two, but any vibration in the drywall just isn't going to move the concrete very much: it's a case of a small kid trying to shake the Hulk: not very effective. On the other hand, if the Hulk shakes the kid (concrete passes on vibration to the drywall), then yep, that works! But if the drywall were not there, the effect would be pretty much the same. So from this point of view, the drywall is pretty irrelevant. It does nod add much to the overall situation.
Where there MIGHT be a bigger issue, is in resonance. Since this is a two-leaf MSM system, there will be resonance going on, and that actually can have an effect on reducing the overall isolation at resonance. The question is: How much? That's hard to say: we'd need to know a lot more about the physical properties of your concrete, drywall, studs and air gap to be sure. There would be some effect, but to be honest, not all that much. In fact, that structure would most likely act more like a tuned bass trap, then an isolation wall...
On the other hand, if you move your stud-and-drywall construction an inch or so away from the concrete wall, then the situation is a bit different. There is no loner any flanking going on, and you now have a fully decoupled 2-leaf system. The drywall and air gap will now have a larger overall effect, since the coupling is gone, and you could get a useful effect, if there is enough mass in the drywall, a decent sized air gap, and good damping.
So the overall answer to your question is: "It's complicated"...
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It would be thicker, yes, and one leaf, yes, but you would have changed pretty much nothing at all like that. A sheet of plywood increases the mass of the wall by only a very small amount... Nothing useful to get any real effect. With a single leaf wall you need to double the mass to get an increase of about 6 dB in isolation (in theory that is... more like 4 to 5 dB in practice, as GraGra pointed out). Even then, that isn't much. You need an increase of 10 dB before you would subjectively judge that the sound level went down to half of what it was, which implies increasing the mas four times over (double, then double again).If I took the concrete block and nailed sheets of plywood directly to it via some type of adhesive and nails then keep tacking layer after layer of drywall to it - making sure to seal and stagger their seams - then it would be one really thick Leaf?
Adding a sheet of plywood to a concrete wall does pretty much nothing for isolation.
Yes, but that's a fully coupled 2-leaf, which is different from a decoupled 2-leaf, as I explained above...But if I tack it to is and there is an air gap or cavity - such as in a standard 2x4" wall - it becomes two leaves?
Right! Assuming typical drum levels of around 110-115 dB, and typical residential noise regulations of around 40 - 50 dB, you should be shooting for 60 dB of isolation, total TL, and a lot of that needs to be in the low end, to attenuate your kick and toms enough. It's not just about the total isolation: It's also about what frequency you are getting the isolation at. I can build you two walls, bot providing 50 dB of isolation, but one would still let you hear the drums bleeding through, while the other wold not...I just want to make sure I am understanding this correctly, because I want to be able to play drums full blast in the middle of the night.... which means I'm going to need some serious Isolation.
"It's complicated..:" !
While GreenGlue is very effective at improving isolation, it is not glue (despite the name), and you cannot use it to stick layers of drywall together. You spread it between the layers, yes, but you still need to attache them in the normal manner, with nails or screws. GreenGlue is a visco-elastic polymer that acts a a constrained layer damping compound between the layers of drywall... but it is not an adhesive.several layers of thick drywall will be necessary, and you can use a product called green glue to stick the sheets together which greatly increases the effectiveness of that leaf.
- Stuart -