Yeah, its number has been estimated at 666
The EDGES of the ceiling should go as I drew them,
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... c&start=45
with BOTH wall layers (or ALL of them) going ALMOST to the ceiling joists, but NOT touching them - then, BOTH or ALL ceiling layers stop leaving 1/4" gap to the wall layers, which extend ABOVE all the ceiling layers. (The RC takes care of this) Then, use acoustic caulking and seal all the gaps well.
The individual layers of wallboard, however, should NEVER coincide their mid-field seams in EITHER direction but be offset by at least a foot, preferably by one joist (either 16" or 24", whichever centers are used)
This means that for a second layer (assuming 24" centers and 48" wide sheets) you would start with a HALF-width sheet, placed at 90 degrees from the previous layer and offset lengthwise by one joist - then, subsequent joints will fall in the middle of previous layers' panels instead of being coincident.
This is definitely different than intersecting walls (other than the seam offsets, which should be done same as ceilings), which should alternate layers, being caulked as you go, so that the finish joint has a caulked, Z-shaped pattern for best isolation.
Even the wall/wall intersections should be gapped and caulked so there is no hard contact between intersecting walls though. By "wall intersection", I do NOT mean the continuation of a straight wall, but a place where two walls meet at an angle OTHER than 180 degrees...
The reason for ceilings being done differently is so that the ceiling wallboard can "float" inside the walls without settling and forming a hard contact between wallboard and ceiling panels. The acoustic caulk is flexible enough not to crack with quite a bit of settling, and should maintain seal.
However, if the wall/ceiling joint were "Z'd" same as wall/wall joints, settling could squeeze out enough caulk to form a hard contact and deteriorate the isolation between surfaces. That would reduce the isolation overall, partly because of one surface exciting the other un-necessarily.
Glad you're learning a lot - given enough beating of our heads on walls, this stuff finally starts to make sense (right about the time we need "rubber rooms" for something besides acoustic reasons

)
Hope you can find the RC Deluxe somewhere - besides the extra strength, it gives you a wider "target" to hit with your screw gun... Steve