Can I trap Horizontally?
Posted: Wed, 2025-May-14, 09:24
Hi there. First post. I have a weird room.
I'm looking for some advice on treating this room. To cut a long story short, it was initially just meant for making noise without disturbing upstairs, but I'd like to mix in there.
Dimensions of main rectangle are H2600 W3200 L6000.
The wall on the left of the chair is a 1 foot thick stone wall..
The wall on the right of the chair is cinderblock (beser brick) rendered both sides and hung with 2 layers of 16mm Fyrecheck drywall on acoustic hangers with tontine insulation hung 2cm off of the concrete floor.
The wall in front of the chair is 1 foot concrete wall then earth. Also hung with fyrecheck with tontine insulation.
The ceiling is 150mm suspended concrete slab with tontine insulation and 1 layer of 16mm Fyrecheck hanging on Rondo acoustic clips.
The wall behind is 200mm thick concrete blocks (200mm x 200mm x 50mm pavers used as bricks) with 3 windows in it. >AND ONLY 2000mm TALL..<
All doors are timber with double glaze 2 x 12mm laminated sheets.
All windows are Jarra framed and double glaze with 2 x 12 mm laminated glass. All joints are filled with acoustic sealant.
It's basically a room within a room (almost just trying to resolve the back wall).
The back wall leads outside into a valley and I think I'll just put double glazing or 2 sliding doors on the perimeter. That'll probably do for isolation.
I realise the corner doors are in a poor position for trapping, I also see the 2 windows either side of the chair are RFZ nightmares, but I think I can fix that with Autex panels.
My real question is bass trapping. Basically I thought I should flush/soffit mount my Neumann 310's and trap behind them and make the front wall soft., but is that even possible with flush mounting? I have access to acoustic materials. I have made the front wall a 700mm thick absorber with 2700 pa.s Pink insulation. It looked good in the calculator for that thickness..It has greatly smoothed the room and reduced the horrible dip at 68hz, but it still exists. I thought perhaps the KH750 with DSP would help.
I'm wondering if I can flush mount, and will the 700mm of insulation still be of any value if the bezels are solid? Or do I keep the centre section soft?
The rear wall...Is it possible to mount trapping horizontally above the rear wall and out, overhead, into the anti chamber? (all concrete)..It would be 600mm H and about 1800mm deep along the ceiling out over the antechamber.
I know thats not all I need, I'll be treating all surfaces as well. I just need to get this fundamental aspect understood before I throw money down the drain.
Thanks for any advice. Cheers!
I'm looking for some advice on treating this room. To cut a long story short, it was initially just meant for making noise without disturbing upstairs, but I'd like to mix in there.
Dimensions of main rectangle are H2600 W3200 L6000.
The wall on the left of the chair is a 1 foot thick stone wall..
The wall on the right of the chair is cinderblock (beser brick) rendered both sides and hung with 2 layers of 16mm Fyrecheck drywall on acoustic hangers with tontine insulation hung 2cm off of the concrete floor.
The wall in front of the chair is 1 foot concrete wall then earth. Also hung with fyrecheck with tontine insulation.
The ceiling is 150mm suspended concrete slab with tontine insulation and 1 layer of 16mm Fyrecheck hanging on Rondo acoustic clips.
The wall behind is 200mm thick concrete blocks (200mm x 200mm x 50mm pavers used as bricks) with 3 windows in it. >AND ONLY 2000mm TALL..<
All doors are timber with double glaze 2 x 12mm laminated sheets.
All windows are Jarra framed and double glaze with 2 x 12 mm laminated glass. All joints are filled with acoustic sealant.
It's basically a room within a room (almost just trying to resolve the back wall).
The back wall leads outside into a valley and I think I'll just put double glazing or 2 sliding doors on the perimeter. That'll probably do for isolation.
I realise the corner doors are in a poor position for trapping, I also see the 2 windows either side of the chair are RFZ nightmares, but I think I can fix that with Autex panels.
My real question is bass trapping. Basically I thought I should flush/soffit mount my Neumann 310's and trap behind them and make the front wall soft., but is that even possible with flush mounting? I have access to acoustic materials. I have made the front wall a 700mm thick absorber with 2700 pa.s Pink insulation. It looked good in the calculator for that thickness..It has greatly smoothed the room and reduced the horrible dip at 68hz, but it still exists. I thought perhaps the KH750 with DSP would help.
I'm wondering if I can flush mount, and will the 700mm of insulation still be of any value if the bezels are solid? Or do I keep the centre section soft?
The rear wall...Is it possible to mount trapping horizontally above the rear wall and out, overhead, into the anti chamber? (all concrete)..It would be 600mm H and about 1800mm deep along the ceiling out over the antechamber.
I know thats not all I need, I'll be treating all surfaces as well. I just need to get this fundamental aspect understood before I throw money down the drain.
Thanks for any advice. Cheers!