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Posted: Sun Nov 20, 2005 4:51 am
by sharward
A bit of follow-up... Here's a quote from Paul Woodlock over at StudioTips:
Paul wrote:After designing a room within a room with high mass walls, the weak link then becomes the floor. So for those ( Like me ) who need a LOT of soundproofing the floating floor is desirable.

The cons of a floating floor is that it's a] expensive, b] Heavy, which usually means ground floor ( or basements ) only, and c] must be calculated properly.

. . .

A lot of the methods don't really work properly. Sadly floating floors are the victim of misinformation, and there's been many floating floors built in DIY studios ( and even some pro studios ) that a] are pointless or b] don't work. or c] both. (Source)
If you don't already know who Paul is, spend a few days reading his studio build diary, and you'll have a much better appreciation of what it takes to float a floor properly. 8)

Posted: Sun Nov 20, 2005 5:03 am
by giles117
He's got a lot of nice pics to go with it as well :)

Posted: Wed Nov 23, 2005 2:58 am
by Big3rd
I've found a product at Lowes that might assist in floating a floor.
Check out the website. It will tell you more about it than I could.
http://www.subflor.com

Posted: Wed Nov 23, 2005 3:20 am
by giles117
Looked at it. Not the best product for THIS job :)

The bottom is a hard Plastic that merely ELEVATES your flooring above the concrete to allow airflow, etc.....

Hard Plastic is not an isolator like Rubber or neoprene.