How to avoid flanking in between leaves?
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Billyboy
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How to avoid flanking in between leaves?
I have done a bunch of reading regarding construction and design in my attempts to build a drum tracking/ rehearsal room (for rock). One question I can't seem to find an answer for is what the best isolation method is for a ceiling between leaves. My gut instinct is to use use 2 layers of drywall/caulk/mineral wool in between the joists which fall in the air space between my 2 leaves. Check out my design thread to get the jist if you like:
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2580
The basic concept is to achieve isolation from the kitchen above the space keeping in mind I'd like to use this room for tracking drums (without breaking the bank). Unfortunately I must keep the load-bearing wall in the iso booth, but I plan to RC that wall/ no RC on it's leafy partner.
Hey, that brings up an other question. Is it best to keep uniform mounting methods/drywall thicknesses throughout each individual room, or is safe to use RC on one wall but not an other? I understand you DO NOT want to use RC on both leaves. I guess using RC on a floating wall is okay because of different sympathetic frequencies?
Thanks for following my inane ramblings-
Josh
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2580
The basic concept is to achieve isolation from the kitchen above the space keeping in mind I'd like to use this room for tracking drums (without breaking the bank). Unfortunately I must keep the load-bearing wall in the iso booth, but I plan to RC that wall/ no RC on it's leafy partner.
Hey, that brings up an other question. Is it best to keep uniform mounting methods/drywall thicknesses throughout each individual room, or is safe to use RC on one wall but not an other? I understand you DO NOT want to use RC on both leaves. I guess using RC on a floating wall is okay because of different sympathetic frequencies?
Thanks for following my inane ramblings-
Josh
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AVare
- Confused, but not senile yet
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That is the right idea. To improve it, use RC, RSIC clips. With the RC clips you achieve an STC of around 55 with a TL of about 17dB@50 Hz. The RSIC would improve that, but I have no test data to provide. The numbers are from NRC IR-811 pdf page 72.My gut instinct is to use use 2 layers of drywall/caulk/mineral wool in between the joists which fall in the air space between my 2 leaves
http://irc.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/irc/fulltext/ir811/ir811.pdf
It all depends on how much isoaltion you need from the space on the other side of the wall. The effects on the acoustics inside the tracking room are not significantly affected.Is it best to keep uniform mounting methods/drywall thicknesses throughout each individual room, or is safe to use RC on one wall but not an other?
Andre
[edit] corrected typing error in page reference.
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Billyboy
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Andre-
Is this what you mean? I only have a 5" airspace, so maybe 2 little strips of RC in there? I'll have to search for the RSIC clips as you mentioned. Would you use them throughout?
Next question- I don't have a diagram for this one yet... Should I put the walls in the diagrams below on top of my floated floor w/ sway brackets at the top and no RC under the wall's drywall? Will I achieve the same STC with a hard connection to the floor/cieling w/ RC on the wall? Granted this is assuming that I correctly build the floor...

This is what I was originally thinking:

Thanks for the reply!
-Josh
Is this what you mean? I only have a 5" airspace, so maybe 2 little strips of RC in there? I'll have to search for the RSIC clips as you mentioned. Would you use them throughout?
Next question- I don't have a diagram for this one yet... Should I put the walls in the diagrams below on top of my floated floor w/ sway brackets at the top and no RC under the wall's drywall? Will I achieve the same STC with a hard connection to the floor/cieling w/ RC on the wall? Granted this is assuming that I correctly build the floor...

This is what I was originally thinking:

Thanks for the reply!
-Josh
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z60611
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RISC can be found/explained here
http://www.pac-intl.com/home.html
They also have measurement tests there. RSIC are much better than RC.
If you can afford a couple less inches of room height, consider room in a room. Then you can skip both RC and RSIC.
http://www.pac-intl.com/home.html
They also have measurement tests there. RSIC are much better than RC.
If you can afford a couple less inches of room height, consider room in a room. Then you can skip both RC and RSIC.
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Billyboy
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- Location: New Hampshire, USA
Okay-
I get the RSIC's now.
I'm still wondering about the floating wall vs RC/RSIC. If I decouple the walls from the floor and the joists using sway brackets, should I still use RC?
I understand that with my cieling height (hoping for 88" finished) I don't have the room to build a complete room in a room. However, everything but the cieling will be on a separate framing structure.
Thanks for your responses.
--Josh
I get the RSIC's now.
I'm still wondering about the floating wall vs RC/RSIC. If I decouple the walls from the floor and the joists using sway brackets, should I still use RC?
I understand that with my cieling height (hoping for 88" finished) I don't have the room to build a complete room in a room. However, everything but the cieling will be on a separate framing structure.
Thanks for your responses.
--Josh
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AVare
- Confused, but not senile yet
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Good move. I persoanlly do not care for RC because of it does to LF performance.Billyboy wrote:Okay-
I get the RSIC's now.
There are several types of RSIC available now. I think the model for ceiling joist installation is the best for you.
Your welcome. Keep us posted on your progress and pictures are always appreciated!I'm still wondering about the floating wall vs RC/RSIC. If I decouple the walls from the floor and the joists using sway brackets, should I still use RC?
Confiming first what I think you are saying: good move to go with the decoupled wall. RSIC and RC would be of no value in this place.
Thanks for your responses.
Quietly isolated;
Andre
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z60611
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If you do that then RC on the walls is less important, but RSIC on the ceiling is still recommended to decouple it a bit. (Assuming you still don't room-in-a-room the walls and ceiling).If I decouple the walls from the joists using sway brackets, should I still use RC?
In Ontario, building code requires 75% of the basement to be 6'11" or over. 88" = 7'4"I understand that with my cieling height (hoping for 88" finished) I don't have the room to build a complete room in a room. However, everything but the cieling will be on a separate framing structure.
In some cases people are able to put the 'room-in-a-room' joists between the existing joists, so even though the new joists are 2x8's, they only loose an inch or two of room height. (Do not remove the cross bracing if it exists)
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Billyboy
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I don't think a complete room in a room is possible unfortunately; there just isn't enough cieling height, and the cross bracing in the joists goes the full width of the joists.
On the qestion of the air space cieling- What do you think? Will 2 layers on sheet rock against the sub floor with insulation below it do the trick? Maybe I should be building mini versions of the RC cieling in the airspace around the room?
Thanks again.
On the qestion of the air space cieling- What do you think? Will 2 layers on sheet rock against the sub floor with insulation below it do the trick? Maybe I should be building mini versions of the RC cieling in the airspace around the room?
Thanks again.
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Billyboy
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- Joined: Mon Nov 01, 2004 4:53 am
- Location: New Hampshire, USA
Hey again-
I have an other question- this time regarding floor construction.
I have read about people using 2x4's on their side to maximize cieling height. I am planning on doing this, but what insulation will be adequate for the job? The other consideration is that the floor is concrete, so I must keep some airspace in between the insulation and the cement. I have read that some compression of the insulation against the sub floor is good, but I only will have 1 1/2" to work with!
Many thanks-
Josh
I have an other question- this time regarding floor construction.
I have read about people using 2x4's on their side to maximize cieling height. I am planning on doing this, but what insulation will be adequate for the job? The other consideration is that the floor is concrete, so I must keep some airspace in between the insulation and the cement. I have read that some compression of the insulation against the sub floor is good, but I only will have 1 1/2" to work with!
Many thanks-
Josh
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knightfly
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Here's a better way for your walls/ceilng - I marked up your drawing where necessary -
Be careful on your floor - narrow air gaps and light weight leaves cause higher mass-air-mass resonances, and will end up AMPLIFYING your drum kit instead of isolating it.
Given your limited headroom, I would recommend forgetting the floated floor until you get everything else finished - then, if you don't get as much isolation as you need, consider floating a concrete slab on thick EPDM or better elastomeric pucks. Wider air gap and heavier floor both go toward lowering resonant frequency, which should be at least 2 octaves below the lowest frequency you hope to isolated - even lower resonant frequency is better.
If you end up having to float a floor, it can be done inside the walls (after the fact) by using perimeter isolation board (Celotex) between walls and floor, then caulking thoroughly to seal... Steve
Be careful on your floor - narrow air gaps and light weight leaves cause higher mass-air-mass resonances, and will end up AMPLIFYING your drum kit instead of isolating it.
Given your limited headroom, I would recommend forgetting the floated floor until you get everything else finished - then, if you don't get as much isolation as you need, consider floating a concrete slab on thick EPDM or better elastomeric pucks. Wider air gap and heavier floor both go toward lowering resonant frequency, which should be at least 2 octaves below the lowest frequency you hope to isolated - even lower resonant frequency is better.
If you end up having to float a floor, it can be done inside the walls (after the fact) by using perimeter isolation board (Celotex) between walls and floor, then caulking thoroughly to seal... Steve
Last edited by knightfly on Tue Nov 16, 2004 8:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Sen
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Steve, I have a question in regards to this.Say the walls were floated on the slab before you went to float the floor inside them, would you still be better off using the isolator around the perimeter or wouldn't it metter.knightfly wrote: If you end up having to float a floor, it can be done inside the walls (after the fact) by using perimeter isolation board (Celotex) between walls and floor, then caulking thoroughly to seal... Steve
I guess my point is:If the sound travels from the floor onto the walls it's still staying in the same room because it can't go further than that since the walls are floated too. But is it better to keep sound (vibrations) on the floor only or on the wall only??I guess it would be because only one of the surfaces would resonate (at whatever frequencies).To cut my bull**** short"Should one float a wall on already floated floor"? And further...float the ceiling on those walls??
thanks
Kind regards
Sen
Sen
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Billyboy
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Steve thanks for taking the time to repond- I know from other posts you lead an insane schedule (and I'm sure I don't know the half of it). A couple of questions:
If I skip the floated floor as you mention- Should I float the walls and use sway brackets, or direct-connect the walls to the floor/cieling joists and use RC? I would think that the floated walls would have better low freq isolation... I think I recall Aaron (of giant Floating Floor thread fame..) had pretty low cieling height too, but he went with standard 2x4's on their 1.5" edge floated on 1/2" neoprene, no?
Don't get me wrong here- if you think no floating floor will be okay, and I can do it later, it'll save me a ton of time and $$. No to mention- It will be far easier estimating the weight of what will be on the floor later (for spring sag in Neoprene) than with walls etc added to the equasion now. I guess thinking about it, if my floor is as thick as the walls are, it's got lots o' mass!
BTW- anyone check out the floor plan? I'm a little curious if the splayed walls are beneficial or not. Not to mention the wierd wall intersection with the airlock wall (lower left).
Thanks everybody. In no way would this be possible without y'all-
Josh
I didn't see the markup- is it on the way or did I miss something? Let me know if you have trouble pulling the pic down.I marked up your drawing where necessary
If I skip the floated floor as you mention- Should I float the walls and use sway brackets, or direct-connect the walls to the floor/cieling joists and use RC? I would think that the floated walls would have better low freq isolation... I think I recall Aaron (of giant Floating Floor thread fame..) had pretty low cieling height too, but he went with standard 2x4's on their 1.5" edge floated on 1/2" neoprene, no?
Don't get me wrong here- if you think no floating floor will be okay, and I can do it later, it'll save me a ton of time and $$. No to mention- It will be far easier estimating the weight of what will be on the floor later (for spring sag in Neoprene) than with walls etc added to the equasion now. I guess thinking about it, if my floor is as thick as the walls are, it's got lots o' mass!
BTW- anyone check out the floor plan? I'm a little curious if the splayed walls are beneficial or not. Not to mention the wierd wall intersection with the airlock wall (lower left).
Thanks everybody. In no way would this be possible without y'all-
Josh
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knightfly
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Sen, for absolute MAX isolation the entire room should be floated - floated floor, inner walls resting on floated floor, inner ceiling resting ONLY on floated inner walls - this can get pretty grim in the calculation department though - best isolation is when no one wall, floor, or ceiling has any hard contact with any other. This requires some MAJOR calculations to get right, and probably only helps a couple of dB at most; it's safer to NOT float walls on top of a floated floor, but just fasten firmly; for one thing, the extra weight of the walls and ceiling will lower the resonance of the entire structure and so improve isolation, mainly through the floor, because of the improved m-a-m values.
I commented about an "after the fact" floated floor mainly due to decreased ceiling height and the possibility that the floated floor may not be necessary at all; If that turns out NOT to be true, you can then build a floated floor INSIDE the walls as I outlined. This does NOT mean this is the BEST way, just a possibly more PRACTICAL way in this case.
Josh, sorry for the brain fart; check that post again, the markup's there now - didn't notice if your existing floor is concrete - if so, I'd use PT lumber for bottom plates and bed in Sill Seal, or similar thin strip - then caulk after each layer of drywall, leave 1/4" gap between all perimeter edges of drywall for caulk. Leave about 1/2" gap between top of inner wall frame and ceiling joists, and use resilient sway brackets. Check Aaron's thread on about page 17-18 for ideas on this.
Run your wallboard up to same height as frame, and drop your ceiling inside the side walls as I show in the markup above. I added some text to the markup too, for more explanation. I goofed on the joint between wall wallboard and ceiling wallboard though - wall should extend enough to make a full depth caulk area between wall and ceiling.
HTH... Steve
I commented about an "after the fact" floated floor mainly due to decreased ceiling height and the possibility that the floated floor may not be necessary at all; If that turns out NOT to be true, you can then build a floated floor INSIDE the walls as I outlined. This does NOT mean this is the BEST way, just a possibly more PRACTICAL way in this case.
Josh, sorry for the brain fart; check that post again, the markup's there now - didn't notice if your existing floor is concrete - if so, I'd use PT lumber for bottom plates and bed in Sill Seal, or similar thin strip - then caulk after each layer of drywall, leave 1/4" gap between all perimeter edges of drywall for caulk. Leave about 1/2" gap between top of inner wall frame and ceiling joists, and use resilient sway brackets. Check Aaron's thread on about page 17-18 for ideas on this.
Run your wallboard up to same height as frame, and drop your ceiling inside the side walls as I show in the markup above. I added some text to the markup too, for more explanation. I goofed on the joint between wall wallboard and ceiling wallboard though - wall should extend enough to make a full depth caulk area between wall and ceiling.
HTH... Steve
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Billyboy
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- Location: New Hampshire, USA
Steve,
That helps tremendously- thanks. I see you put 2 layers of drywall in between all of the joists- I was thinking that might help.
I read in a post that you're not 100% on the RSIC. Any new opinions? I guess the $/performance ratio isn't tremendously good, but I can use every ounce (db) of isolation possible!
Everything else seems pretty straight forward as far as basic construction goes. I'm sure I'll have a ton more questions as I get under way.
Once again,
Josh
That helps tremendously- thanks. I see you put 2 layers of drywall in between all of the joists- I was thinking that might help.
I read in a post that you're not 100% on the RSIC. Any new opinions? I guess the $/performance ratio isn't tremendously good, but I can use every ounce (db) of isolation possible!
Everything else seems pretty straight forward as far as basic construction goes. I'm sure I'll have a ton more questions as I get under way.
Once again,
Josh
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knightfly
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