Hi. Please read the
forum rules for posting (click here). You seem to be missing a couple of things!
will only be about 2.4m x 4.5m when completed
Height? Sound is 3D, not 2D, so height is important too. In fact, height is VERY important.
I assume it is fine to do this with leveling compound?
Right.
I need to raise the floor approximately 180mm so it's level with the hallway.
That implies LOSING 18cm of ceiling height. That's a lot. Unless your ceiling is very high already, then it would not be good to lose height. It would be better to just have one step down into the home theater.
What is the best method for doing this and what would be the best combination of materials to use?
If you really are intent on doing that, then the best materiel is simply concrete. Nothing better.
There seems to be a bewildering array of products on the market, and I see recommendation and condemnation of them all in equal measure it seems lol!
First, you MUST avoid having any type of air cavity down there. If you are thinking of any type of floor that has air in it (such as a raised wooden floor with insulation inside), then that would be a bad idea. That's a resonant cavity, and it WILL resonate at whatever frequencies it is tuned too...
I am somewhat limited by budget... flexible, but I don't have thousands to spend on it alone, as much as some people may say I should.
Then you have basically three options:
1) Don't do anything! just level it, and have a step down. That's the best, easiest, and cheapest.
2) Fill it with concrete 18cm thick.
3) Fill it with loose, dry sand, then put a wooden deck on top.
I will be going with a room within a room setup, so my stud walls will be built off the floor, with new ceiling joists off these, entirely decoupled from the existing brickwork.
Excellent! And that rules out option 3: you can't have your inner-leaf walls resting on a sand-filled deck. That leaves you with options 1 and 2.
- Stuart -