Need Advice for Treating Acoustics in My New Home Studio
Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 7:21 am
Hello all,
I’ve been doing a lot of lurking here lately and have finally decided to throw my hat into the ring and ask for some help. I need some advice in tuning my studio at a house we will soon move into located in Denton, TX. The room is located on a far side of the house on a four acre property. I play drums and keyboards. I don’t think sound penetration is going to be much if any issue here (for the first time ever!). The main thing I want to do is tune this room to be a first rate acoustical environment for:
listening to music (both stereo, and 5.1)
composing, arranging and mixing music
practicing and teaching percussion
using room as a home theater
Please excuse my crude drawing (although it is to scale)
The room is 22 feet on the long side and 15 feet wide with a short hall space which is 7 feet long by 5 feet wide. Ceiling is 10 feet high. Everything is unfortunately parallel.
Five doors!!! Wow! Here’s a breakdown:
Bottom left door goes to garage
Bottom middle goes into butler’s pantry and then kitchen
Bottom right goes into storage room
Hallway side door goes into a restroom
Hallway back door goes into backyard
The room was initially built as a second living area. It currently has a tile floor and sheet rock walls and ceiling, with five doors and a large window. In its current state it sounds like a small gym. My job is to tune the room so that it will absorb sound, have as flat a frequency response as possible, and be suitable for my musical pursuits. I plan on carpeting the floor because: I like the way it looks, feels and functions as an acoustical absorber of sound.
After reading lots of posts here, I have begrudgingly decided to set up my mixing desk so that the speakers fire into the long side of the room (even though I am blocking a window view of a beautiful four acre meadow!).
I plan on covering much of the walls with 24 x 48 panels of Owens-Corning fiberglass insulation. I will place panels where the wall meets the ceiling, all the way around the room (even in the small hallway on the upper right). I’m also going to mount 24 x 72 bass trap panels in the corners located at the top left of the room and far right corner of the hallway. I plan on mounting the “Ethan Winer” type panels on all three back doors with similar panels in the wall corners adjacent to the door panels. I’ll also use “Ethan Winer” type 32 inch triangle traps in the tops of all corners and in the bottom of the upper left corner and in the bottom of the far right hallway corner.
I plan on putting clips on all wall and door panels so that they will be three inches from the wall.
Questions:
Should I use OC 703 or 705 fiberglass (or a mixture)?
Should I get the FRK version with a membrane on the back?
It looks like the first reflection point on the right wall will be somewhere in the middle of the hallway passage. How should I deal with this? (I don’t really want to move my mixing desk back because it will block access to the hallway.)
What sound acoustical issues am I going to face with that hallway on my right side?
... and will it make a difference that the first reflection point is treated differently on the right and left wall?
I am thinking of getting some curtains to put behind my monitors to take up behind-monitor wall reflections. Opinions???
For the two long walls, in addition to the sideways panels mounted where the wall meets the ceiling, I am going to mount several 24 x 48 panels about six inches apart, up and down along the wall. Should I use OC FRK fiberglass (with the membrane), alternating with the membrane on the outside and inside for a randomness of reflection and absorption?
Is any diffusion recommended for the back wall? I’m at a disadvantage with the door in the center of the room.
I really don’t have a plan in place for ceiling absorption yet. I know that I need to mount several panels, beginning with first reflection points from my monitors but then what?
I am not new to building home studios. When we recently moved, I (reluctantly) gave up a great home built studio:
http://www.mikemyersmusic.com/studio.html
This studio was built 21 years ago and I used it every single day. There are many who would not agree with my wall treatment, however, that room sounded great. In my new studio, I want to take it to a higher level and really do it first rate in terms of sound and a flat frequency response. I appreciate any and all advice by the experts who hang out here!
Mike Myers
mikemyersmusic.com
I’ve been doing a lot of lurking here lately and have finally decided to throw my hat into the ring and ask for some help. I need some advice in tuning my studio at a house we will soon move into located in Denton, TX. The room is located on a far side of the house on a four acre property. I play drums and keyboards. I don’t think sound penetration is going to be much if any issue here (for the first time ever!). The main thing I want to do is tune this room to be a first rate acoustical environment for:
listening to music (both stereo, and 5.1)
composing, arranging and mixing music
practicing and teaching percussion
using room as a home theater
Please excuse my crude drawing (although it is to scale)
The room is 22 feet on the long side and 15 feet wide with a short hall space which is 7 feet long by 5 feet wide. Ceiling is 10 feet high. Everything is unfortunately parallel.
Five doors!!! Wow! Here’s a breakdown:
Bottom left door goes to garage
Bottom middle goes into butler’s pantry and then kitchen
Bottom right goes into storage room
Hallway side door goes into a restroom
Hallway back door goes into backyard
The room was initially built as a second living area. It currently has a tile floor and sheet rock walls and ceiling, with five doors and a large window. In its current state it sounds like a small gym. My job is to tune the room so that it will absorb sound, have as flat a frequency response as possible, and be suitable for my musical pursuits. I plan on carpeting the floor because: I like the way it looks, feels and functions as an acoustical absorber of sound.
After reading lots of posts here, I have begrudgingly decided to set up my mixing desk so that the speakers fire into the long side of the room (even though I am blocking a window view of a beautiful four acre meadow!).
I plan on covering much of the walls with 24 x 48 panels of Owens-Corning fiberglass insulation. I will place panels where the wall meets the ceiling, all the way around the room (even in the small hallway on the upper right). I’m also going to mount 24 x 72 bass trap panels in the corners located at the top left of the room and far right corner of the hallway. I plan on mounting the “Ethan Winer” type panels on all three back doors with similar panels in the wall corners adjacent to the door panels. I’ll also use “Ethan Winer” type 32 inch triangle traps in the tops of all corners and in the bottom of the upper left corner and in the bottom of the far right hallway corner.
I plan on putting clips on all wall and door panels so that they will be three inches from the wall.
Questions:
Should I use OC 703 or 705 fiberglass (or a mixture)?
Should I get the FRK version with a membrane on the back?
It looks like the first reflection point on the right wall will be somewhere in the middle of the hallway passage. How should I deal with this? (I don’t really want to move my mixing desk back because it will block access to the hallway.)
What sound acoustical issues am I going to face with that hallway on my right side?
... and will it make a difference that the first reflection point is treated differently on the right and left wall?
I am thinking of getting some curtains to put behind my monitors to take up behind-monitor wall reflections. Opinions???
For the two long walls, in addition to the sideways panels mounted where the wall meets the ceiling, I am going to mount several 24 x 48 panels about six inches apart, up and down along the wall. Should I use OC FRK fiberglass (with the membrane), alternating with the membrane on the outside and inside for a randomness of reflection and absorption?
Is any diffusion recommended for the back wall? I’m at a disadvantage with the door in the center of the room.
I really don’t have a plan in place for ceiling absorption yet. I know that I need to mount several panels, beginning with first reflection points from my monitors but then what?
I am not new to building home studios. When we recently moved, I (reluctantly) gave up a great home built studio:
http://www.mikemyersmusic.com/studio.html
This studio was built 21 years ago and I used it every single day. There are many who would not agree with my wall treatment, however, that room sounded great. In my new studio, I want to take it to a higher level and really do it first rate in terms of sound and a flat frequency response. I appreciate any and all advice by the experts who hang out here!
Mike Myers
mikemyersmusic.com