I think I'm just gonna get a few packs of 703 and go pick it up on my lunch break. Figure with two layers it'll be more like 4", which I'd prefer. But my main question is if my idea of using these in the future studio as the second angled walls is a good idea? It's not for isolation, more for treatment and getting the RFZ zone, as far as my limited understanding goes anywayYes. If you're using them as your suedo rear wall treatment, use 6" thick (so two batts of it).
For this I really mean in the walls for isolation, not elsewhere in the room for treatment. So I'll be using a ton of it, and I just started getting freaked out that I was making a mistake. The R-24 stuff would be good for a superchunk, but it's 6" thick so can't use it in the walls. Maybe the ceiling...but I'm not there yet.Chances are it will work great for your temp room. When it comes to treating your actual control room, you'll probably need an assortment of insulation products in order to target problems.
I apologize if I'm not explaining this clearly, but this goes to my point above. The two gobos would be to pull double duty - as treatment behind the mix area in my temporary studio, and then as the second angled walls in the mix area of the future studio. And then I guess triple duty, as I could move them around for tracking in theory, but this is the least important use. For the first two, would it be good to have a hard surface? It may be impossible to know right now, just thinking I'd rather include that in the initial planning if it will be helpful.With very heavy/thick material, you could achieve some isolation, but as you know, it won't help with low frequencies at all. It would help with higher frequencies only (like plexi in front of a drum kit at a live show). With your current set up, I would suggest laying guide tracks over a click track and then record one musician at a time. In my experience, unless it's off the cuff jazz improv, it always yields better and quicker results.
Excellent point! I was planning on delaying any bass trapping until I'm in the future studio, but maybe I should figure out some treatments for the temp studio that I can re-use as well. Or maybe even just figure out something cheap and temporary that will help for the time being.Your drawing does not show any bass trapping. That needs to be priority number 1. I just leaned up a few 12" wide strips of insulation in two of the corners of my daughters room where I'm doing a little bit of work and REW measurement differences are staggering. They are only about 6 feet long so I'm missing out on tri corner benefits. I can only imagine how much better the room would be with nice wide devices in every corner. Anyway, I would treat your temp room as any other control room and apply one device at a time and take measurements. Targeting first reflections, tons of bass trapping, and of course having that thick rear wall treatment would be no brainer steps going forward.
Appreciate the help very much, and any further clarification in particular on the wisdom of my double duty walls and the insulation to use inside the actual studio walls would be most welcome!