Room help please.
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
Room help please.
Hi Everyone I am trying to replace the acoustic foam in a small voiceover/mix room. Currently there is about 2" thick foam on all the walls starting 3' from the floor (where there isnt a window/door). The foam is about 10 years old and was painted, and now most of the paint is gone due to dry rot and its dusty mess. So that needs to go. With that foam the room was very dry, something I am unsure is suitable for our needs. This is for a college radio station, so a balance of low cost and somewhat decent results is what we are aiming for. Looking good is also a requirement. We use two dynamic mics to record voiceovers, and the room was soundproof enough for our needs with the old foam. If getting rid of it is going to make a difference, that also needs to be factored in, but i think the studio was built with soundproofing in mind with doubled windows and doors. I was thinking of getting some 2" wedge acoustic foam and lining the wall next the the ceiling with it, or putting it in diamonds at various places in the room. What I am aiming to get is decent sounding voiceovers and true representation out of the monitors.
I have attached a drawing of the room. It has an 8' drop ceiling with the standard whiteish (fiberglass?) tiles. the windows are 40"x39" and start about 3' off the ground, leaving 21" of wall above them. the door (frame) is 41"x86", leaving 10" of wall above it. From the floor there is commercial grade carpet going 3' up the walls.
Thanks for any help or comments.
I have attached a drawing of the room. It has an 8' drop ceiling with the standard whiteish (fiberglass?) tiles. the windows are 40"x39" and start about 3' off the ground, leaving 21" of wall above them. the door (frame) is 41"x86", leaving 10" of wall above it. From the floor there is commercial grade carpet going 3' up the walls.
Thanks for any help or comments.
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kendale
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Aloha and welcome to the forum, milesdf
I've attached for drawing for easier reference
Is there any chance you could attach some pics of the room also?
Most of the designs for acoustic treatments you'll find here will be for using some type of insulation material to absorb the low-mids - high freqs instead of foam based products.
Here's a good reference for some basic principles about acoustics, absorbers and construction - SAE Website: http://www.saecollege.de/reference_material/index.html
(be sure to click on the acoustics, absorbers, construction tabs at left, and tabs that appear at the top of the pages)
Wall units plans - http://www.johnlsayers.com/HR/index1.htm
Here are some links regarding vocal booths that might prove helpful:
Vocal Booth Acoustic Treatment - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Venting a Vocal Booth - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Vocal Booths - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... ?p=443#443
Building a Vocal Booth - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Iso Booth Ideas - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Aloha
I've attached for drawing for easier reference
Most of the designs for acoustic treatments you'll find here will be for using some type of insulation material to absorb the low-mids - high freqs instead of foam based products.
Here's a good reference for some basic principles about acoustics, absorbers and construction - SAE Website: http://www.saecollege.de/reference_material/index.html
(be sure to click on the acoustics, absorbers, construction tabs at left, and tabs that appear at the top of the pages)
Wall units plans - http://www.johnlsayers.com/HR/index1.htm
Here are some links regarding vocal booths that might prove helpful:
Vocal Booth Acoustic Treatment - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Venting a Vocal Booth - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Vocal Booths - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... ?p=443#443
Building a Vocal Booth - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Iso Booth Ideas - http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Quote:
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... ?p=443#443 A vocal booth need to be quite dead with no apparent roomsound if you want a tight vocal sound. When I say dead I mean right across the frequency spectrum which requires various absorbers aimed at different frequency ranges. Have you been to the SAE site? check out absorbers.
http://www.saecollege.de/reference_material/index.html cheers, john
Hope these help,Quote:
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... booth+jpeg
Mode-wise, a 5 x 6 x 7 (inside) booth looks very good. It will also fit into an 8 foot ceilinged area if necessary, and is big enough for 3 (very) friendly vocalists or 1-2 with a guitar, so that's what I'm going to start with. Once I finish (don't stop breathing while you wait, I have 'way too many projects still open) you could change dimensions to suit, just do NOT make any two dimensions the same, or more than one dimension in even # of feet. Steve
Aloha
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
thanks for the links, it does seem like alot of this is focused on building and soundproofing though, i would just like to re-emphasize that i dont have the resources to build much of anything in there, and it is sound proof enough, so I would just like to get vocals sounding nice and be able to listen to the monitors without much room influence.
from what i am reading, its not very nessecary to put absorbtion on the wall in front of the vocal, only behind them so the sound ends up bouncing on the reflective wall but then is absorbed on the other one before it gets back to the mic. the issue here is that there is a window on the other wall were the absortion would go. I have also read that there are issues with standard foam because it doesnt absorb enough low frequencies, so more broadband devices have to be used. I guess i can see this because the tone from the old foam wasnt too good, almost "in a box" as described by some of the posters. good info already. maybe i will have to turn the desk in that room so i can get a good wall behind the vocal.
edit: i will try to get some pics tommorrow.
from what i am reading, its not very nessecary to put absorbtion on the wall in front of the vocal, only behind them so the sound ends up bouncing on the reflective wall but then is absorbed on the other one before it gets back to the mic. the issue here is that there is a window on the other wall were the absortion would go. I have also read that there are issues with standard foam because it doesnt absorb enough low frequencies, so more broadband devices have to be used. I guess i can see this because the tone from the old foam wasnt too good, almost "in a box" as described by some of the posters. good info already. maybe i will have to turn the desk in that room so i can get a good wall behind the vocal.
edit: i will try to get some pics tommorrow.
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AVare
- Confused, but not senile yet
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Kendale gave you the short answer to the vocals here:milesdf wrote:thanks for the links, it does seem like alot of this is focused on building and soundproofing though, i would just like to re-emphasize that i dont have the resources to build much of anything in there, and it is sound proof enough, so I would just like to get vocals sounding nice and be able to listen to the monitors without much room influence..
As far as "listen to the monitors without much room influence.." goes, the reference material Kendale referenced gives you a good start on it.Most of the designs for acoustic treatments you'll find here will be for using some type of insulation material to absorb the low-mids - high freqs instead of foam based products.
Andre
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
hmm thanks for the clarification, I see your point about foam not absorbing in those ranges. how much low frequency absorbtion do you think I need? its not like we are singing, just normal level talking. i also am liking the idea of using insulation in a pretty enclosed box, as this would probablly last forever, solving the issues we had with the foam. are such units commercially availible, as we are part of a school and woodworking is going to be a little difficult.
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David French
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- Location: Indiana
Human speech fundamentals can get down into the 130 Hz range, so I would aim to absorb down to 100 Hz. For this, corner absorption rather than flush wall mounting is necessary. Two inch thick mineral wool panels across the corners of the room will be effective down 100 Hz (not much after that), which will cover al but the lowest modes of vibration in your room. If you need to monitor music in that room, I would use 4" panels acrosss the corners as they are effective down to about 60 Hz.
Modern high quality foam will last a very long time....as this would probablly last forever, solving the issues we had with the foam.
David M. French
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
thanks for the advice! corner panels are going to be very difficult to achieve in this room though, I am thinking. how wide do you think they have to be? do they have to have the wooden slats on the front? I think our issue with the foam stemmed from the paint that was on it, not the foam itself. after ten years the paint has started to dryrot. will 4" corner panels alone be sufficient in these rooms, or will I also need more absorbtion on the walls?David French wrote:Human speech fundamentals can get down into the 130 Hz range, so I would aim to absorb down to 100 Hz. For this, corner absorption rather than flush wall mounting is necessary. Two inch thick mineral wool panels across the corners of the room will be effective down 100 Hz (not much after that), which will cover al but the lowest modes of vibration in your room. If you need to monitor music in that room, I would use 4" panels acrosss the corners as they are effective down to about 60 Hz.
Modern high quality foam will last a very long time....as this would probablly last forever, solving the issues we had with the foam.
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David French
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 3:09 pm
- Location: Indiana
The performance spec I gave you for rigid mineral wool is for the standard 2' x 4' panel size. When placed across the corner at 45 degrees, the edges come out approximately 17" from each corner along the surface of the wall.
No wooden slats should be used. The design is quite simple; all you need is a panel of Owens Corning 703 or equivalent wrapped in fabric for looks and fiber control and some method of mounting the panel.
For your room, for the purposes of recording speech, I would guess that one 4" thick panel placed vertically at 45 degrees across each wall-meets-wall corner would take care of the low end. I would also use additional absorption, either 2" 703 with an airspace of 4" foam, flush mounted on the walls in the center of each surface.
No wooden slats should be used. The design is quite simple; all you need is a panel of Owens Corning 703 or equivalent wrapped in fabric for looks and fiber control and some method of mounting the panel.
For your room, for the purposes of recording speech, I would guess that one 4" thick panel placed vertically at 45 degrees across each wall-meets-wall corner would take care of the low end. I would also use additional absorption, either 2" 703 with an airspace of 4" foam, flush mounted on the walls in the center of each surface.
David M. French
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milesdf
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- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
hmm. you will notice in the drawing that one corner cannot recieve such treatment due to the door being right there. is there any way to account for this? how about these panels in the corners from the walls to cieling? would this make any difference? The pages on building these contraptions seem to be very good, they look pretty easy to make and I think i can borrow the neccessary tools. im going to get pictures now, if i can find some batteries for my camera.
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David French
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Don't worry about the door issue. You will have similar performance in the low end if you put two in one corner; however, you will get better high end performance if you distribute the panels evenly. Floor to ceiling is the standard idea, so if you'd like to do that and it's convenient, go for it.
David M. French
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
round 2 on posting pictures, resized this time.
edit: hmm i cant post comments, well here they are:
1. from door looking into the left corner.
2. from door looking into the right corner.
3. corner next to door.
4. very old studio gear, will be upgraded soon.
5. corner behind door, flaky paint foam is visible.
6. nasty nasty foam, from behind harrassed by hands looking for the lightswitch over ten years.
edit: hmm i cant post comments, well here they are:
1. from door looking into the left corner.
2. from door looking into the right corner.
3. corner next to door.
4. very old studio gear, will be upgraded soon.
5. corner behind door, flaky paint foam is visible.
6. nasty nasty foam, from behind harrassed by hands looking for the lightswitch over ten years.
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
thanks for the reply.David French wrote:Don't worry about the door issue. You will have similar performance in the low end if you put two in one corner; however, you will get better high end performance if you distribute the panels evenly. Floor to ceiling is the standard idea, so if you'd like to do that and it's convenient, go for it.
I was talking about putting corner panels horizontally instead of vertically, such as the corner between the wall and ceiling, instead of wall and wall.
So what I am thinking is two 4" corner panels and 2-3 2" wall panels, all 2'x4'. What kind of results will this get me? from what i am reading and hearing, it will probablly be much better in the low end but the foam will have done a better job in the high end.
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David French
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- Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 3:09 pm
- Location: Indiana
Don't use horizontal wall-meets-ceiling placement. The ceiling tiles will do the job in this dimension.
I would try to work in four vertical panels if you can.
Comparing the room with foam to the room with fiberglass, yes, the foam room is more effective in the high end.. the really high end. There's probably nary an 18kHz reflection in that room. Too bad there's nary an 18 Khz sound coming from anyone's mouth. The big problem with foam on the walls like that without any other treatment is that is just soaks up the highs and leaves the low end problems sounding even more conspicuous.
I would try to work in four vertical panels if you can.
Comparing the room with foam to the room with fiberglass, yes, the foam room is more effective in the high end.. the really high end. There's probably nary an 18kHz reflection in that room. Too bad there's nary an 18 Khz sound coming from anyone's mouth. The big problem with foam on the walls like that without any other treatment is that is just soaks up the highs and leaves the low end problems sounding even more conspicuous.
David M. French
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milesdf
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:28 am
- Location: Villanova, PA, USA
by vertical panels do you mean on the walls or in the corners, like I should bridge a corner with two panels instead of just one?David French wrote:Don't use horizontal wall-meets-ceiling placement. The ceiling tiles will do the job in this dimension.
I would try to work in four vertical panels if you can.
Comparing the room with foam to the room with fiberglass, yes, the foam room is more effective in the high end.. the really high end. There's probably nary an 18kHz reflection in that room. Too bad there's nary an 18 Khz sound coming from anyone's mouth. The big problem with foam on the walls like that without any other treatment is that is just soaks up the highs and leaves the low end problems sounding even more conspicuous.
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David French
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 3:09 pm
- Location: Indiana