Paulus87 wrote:
Hi Gabo,
Yes you can use the formulas that Greg generously shared above. I would just use 1mm steel, 1m x 2m sandwiched between 100mm rockwool (1 layer per side) make sure the layer on the back of the steel is up close touching the actual rear wall panels. This is a simple design based on the RPG modex plate, someone online made them and found them to be extremely effective over a broad range of frequencies down to 40hz. You could also use Isobond foam for the back layer, but it’s a bit more expensive I believe.
Thanks, I think I understand how to construct these, at least on paper before I actually start working on them. Which will be something like 5+ months down the road. There area a number of factors that have delayed the start of the house a bit, and even the start just means a bulldozer moving dirt. We're hoping to get much of the control room work finished within the next year.
Paulus87 wrote:Anyway. That’s getting way ahead of yourself. Your comment about the construction methods being more important that your design and layout in my opinion is worrying. Yes of course it’s important to learn how to construct things correctly but your design is the most crucial step in this whole process. You should design every detail, every stud, every seam before you even pick up a hammer. Otherwise you will make an expensive mistake.
No worries, not getting ahead of myself. In looking and thinking about the details of layout and design, I sometimes like to step back and understand what the bigger picture is and imagine how the construction and full project will play out.
Paulus87 wrote:
Those John Brandt style wave guides absorbers are actually what I had planned for in the designs I shared with you, I just didn’t draw them in detail. Yes on the side walls. They’re good because they take up less space than hangers but work in a very similar way, the concept is the same, the main difference is the wave guides are fixed and rigid instead of freely hanging. I am also using them in my own studio build on the side walls. I’m using hangers on the front, rear, corners and above in the ceiling and then the slimmer fixed wave guide absorbers on the side walls.
Yes, for the walls on the side of the control room, my thoughts are to use those wave guide absorber walls. What I have in mind is to construct them 12" thick and have in my mind a method to easily build them that thickness. They really wouldn't have any sheetrock on either side, more likely rustic vertical slats/boards with space between them.
This also falls into part of the reason behind looking at construction techniques. Unfortunately this is not a multi-million dollar project. Everything that is done here will need to be things we can build. Buying very expensive panels and treatment is not going to be an option. So I'm trying to understand what can be done with hard work. Luckily, it's all doable by the people we have involved at reasonable prices.
Paulus87 wrote:
The questions I have are 1. Do you want angled walls? And 2. Do you really want that extra wide space at the rear of the control room? If those are restraints then going forward I can incorporate them into some designs, but if they are not restraints then I would ask you why do you want to design it like that?
Nothing special about the angled walls. And the wide space at the rear of the control room is desired. This is the source of why I've been looking at construction and how to deal with things. We have a few issues here that bother me a bit. The full outer space pretty much is what it is and changing it in any way that helps isn't possible. The issue revolves around the dimensions and ratios.
As you correctly pointed out in your first design, the proper way would be to make the control room much longer. But that takes too much real estate from the live room. Having a live room that size is highly desirable for many reasons.
So the next option would be to enlarge the space out the back. But due to budget and other issues around the entire structure, that's not possible.
The other option would be to shrink the size of the control room to build proper desirable ratios. But doing that shrinks the control to a very small size, and means that the ceiling would be too high to create good ratios as well. The ceiling could dealt with, but losing all the space around the studio is not desirable and having a big control room is very desirable. The style of music, and the way the producer/engineer likes to work, means that a lot of recording work is actually done in the control room. That work is all "direct in" work, so acoustics of the room don't come into play for the actual recording. But the size of the room, to fit 6, 8, 10, even 12 persons in the room while they work on parts is highly desirable.
Which brings me back to the angled walls and the construction techniques. The angled walls was my first (very novice) and poor attempt to try to create a space that had better room ratios while still preserving the space at the back of the room.
But after studying more and thinking about construction techniques, I now understand that doesn't really do anything for the room ratio to speak of, especially if we build the walls like I mentioned. With walls that are 12" thick and no sheetrock/gypsum or other full coverage on either side, the size of the room becomes the outside walls anyway.
The ratios still aren't great, but with 12" thick walls and a huge airgap of 5+ ft to another wall that will have treatment, maybe the modes can be controlled? None of that can be understood until you think about what type of construction you are going to use on those walls.
And with this latest thinking on the construction and size of things, then no the walls do not have to be angled at all and are possibly better just straight. Which for the most part, just puts me back at the same layout as the original that was in the very first post.
It all comes down to answering this question. Is it possible to build a really good control room space given the dimensions and layout in the first post? If the answer is, "no it's not possible," then we have 2 more questions. Are we willing to live with a less than good control room in order to have the space in both the control room and live room we desire? Or, are we willing to live with less live room space and constraints in order to have the great control room we desire?
In the name of "have your cake and eat it too," I started studying construction techniques, trapping techniques, and treatment options, trying to determine (in my own little pea brain) if it were possible to build a satisfactory control room given dimensions and space similar to the original layout. Which led to an initial bit of work using ray tracing, which is what originally led me to the angled walls. If you don't have the ability to do optimal treatment, the angled walls do appear to help create a better RFZ, or at least it seems that way using ray tracing.
But then learning more and studying the type of walls/treatment possible, and understanding as to whether they are things we can build, I have come to the conclusion that NO the angled walls really don't help. Because I think we CAN do proper treatment.
So that's all led me to believe, at least at this point, that with proper construction and treatment, a pretty good control room can indeed be done using the "less than great" ratios of the original room layout. Which preserves both the large live room and also the large control room space, both of which are very desirable.
Just another point... having had a previous studio with drum room, vocal booths, etc. The owner/engineer/producer has very little desire for those any more. His work wound up rarely using those, preferring the larger live room for drums/vocals/full bands. So the desire is to have a large control room and a large live room. Also just FYI, the owner/engineer/producer has been doing this for about 30 years and has owned his own studio for the past 12 years. He has a long list of clientele and a lot of repeat business. Believe it or not, he's actually recorded/mixed/produced 2 albums in the past 6 months working out of a rental house! Hopefully we're finally going to give him a proper place to work after all these years! He will probably do some amazing work if we can pull it off, he's already done some great work with terrible tools! I really think the guy could mix in a phone booth, it's uncanny how he can make things sound great no matter what the situation, but I digress
Paulus87 wrote:
The very first thing we need to establish though is have you decided whether you’re going to do a fully
Isolated studio with double walls for every room or is every room just going to be single partition walls, all connected?
If the latter then that’s fine as long as you fully understand the implications of building it like that.
Paul
So the above gives you some more info on the latest thoughts on the walls in the control room, albeit often changing based on gaining more knowledge. The walls in the live room will also be double walls, so the walls that are depicted are the "outside" walls and there will be walls inside those.
My current thinking on the live room walls is similar wave guide trap/walls, but the front of the walls might be alternating sections of diffusion and absorption. But of course that is current thinking without studying it enough.
Thanks so much for all your continued help! If nothing else it challenges me, and I've never backed away from a challenge
gabo