... as you should be!I have a rough plan for my control room now which I thought I would run by you guys. Maybe there are some important aspects I have missed or things that can be improved at this stage (before I start cutting the wood!). I would love to have any feedback that you can give me. I have never built an entire room before and I am a little worried at the prospect.
16mm would be better...It is just the inside leaf, made with 2 x 12.5mm plasterboard.
Good idea, but if you do the left and right walls differently, then you won't have an acoustically symmetrical room.... I would do BOTH side walls the same.The R side wall is ‘inside out’ with the studs on the inside ( to maximise space).
It's unusual to have it higher than it is wide, but acoustically the ratio is still valid. I would suggest that you hang a good sized cloud above the desk/speaker area, hard-backed, and angled.width - 325cm length - 413 cm height 285 cm (or maybe a few cm more to allow for a different flooring to be laid later on). This conforms to ratio 1 : 1.14 : 1.39
38% is just a recommended starting point.... not necessarily the best position. There are many other factors that might lead a designer to move away from 38%.listening spot is at 38% (148cm from front wall)
floor - is concrete. It will be sealed and painted ( later ).
Right. As above: make them hard-backed, and angled.ceiling - I plan a couple of largish clouds over the listening area, maybe some more absorption further back if required after testing.
Silencer "box"? singular? Only one? You will have two ducts, one bringing fresh air in, the other take stale air out. Each of those ducts passes through two leaves (inner-leaf and outer-leaf). Therefore you will need four silencer boxes, not just one.ventilation - a fan and silencer box located at G (outside the interior door) sucks the air out (from L) . There is a 2nd door outside this that leads to the outside world.
Fresh air comes in at C, near the air conditioning. Silencer box in roof void.
Personally, I would put it at "K". It's no fun to have cold air spraying on your face all the time, plus your ears are more sensitive to noise in front of you, then to noise behind you. I generally try to have the fresh air come in at the back of the room, directly into the mini-split unit, where it can be cooled and dehumidified immediately, and then exhaust the stale air out at the front of the room. So the net air flow is form the back of the room towards the front.air conditioning - mini split located at B.
Soffit mounting is excellent, but yes, you have a LOT of work to do on the soffit design!A - soffit mounted speakers. Probably some hangers above and below. I still need to work out the exact measurements and design but this is a working estimate.
Or maybe a window into the live room, so you an see what is going on in there without ending up with a twisted neck? I would seriously re-consider the entire layout, and rotate the CR so it faces the LR. If you don't you'll be remembering my advice for the rest of your life, and wishing you had taken it...B - wall between speakers with 10cm rock wool. Air condoning duct higher up.
... on the other hand, if you design your room following the RFZ principle (also CID and NER), then there wouldn't be any first reflections for you to worry about!D (and N) - lots of rock wool here to destroy first reflections.
Don't guess! Do the math... It's not hard to figure out...E is a window to the outdoors. F is a window into the live room. Exact specs not decided yet but 2 layers of laminate glass for each, maybe 10mm and 12mm.
What's the 4x2 for? You cannot have hollow studio doors, if that's what you were planning.H is the door(s) to the live room (2nd door will be on the next wall). Each door will be around 70kg, made with 18mm mdf and 4x2 timber (probably).
No bass trapping? You will DEFINITELY need bass trapping in your corners. That goes without saying. Which is a REALLY good reason to re-arrange your layout so that there are no doors in room corners. Corners are prime, expensive, valuable real estate for treatment: the best place in the house! Putting a door in a corner is somewhat akin to designing a beachfront town with the garbage dump on the beach, and the houses down in the bottom of the ravine... It makes no sense. Put the houses on the beachfront, and the garbage dump in the ravine. Put the bass traps in the corners, and the doors in the unused parts of the wall.K - rear wall to have maybe covered with 20cm rock wool and/or some hangers.
The most basic concept is OK, but the overall layout of the facility is poor, and there is a lot of room for improvement...Any thoughts guys?
- Stuart -