Attic Shaped Studio
Posted: Tue, 2021-Jun-08, 10:21
Congratulations Jennifer!
I can't wait to see your monitors flush mounted.
I can't wait to see your monitors flush mounted.
Superior Acoustic Assistance for Recording Studio Builders
https://forum.digistar.cl/
Source of my quote.Startlight wrote:The rear wall in now a 70cm (27") deep bass trap, following the principle of a Non-environment control room (see Recording Studio Design, 3rd ed., figure 16.1, page 457). I am staggered at the effect this trap has made: I can now hear individual instruments so clearly in my recordings and bought CDs.
Startlight wrote:The rear wall in now a 70cm (27") deep bass trap, following the principle of a Non-environment control room (see Recording Studio Design, 3rd ed., figure 16.1, page 457). I am staggered at the effect this trap has made: I can now hear individual instruments so clearly in my recordings and bought CDs.
garethmetcalf wrote:Source of the postGet those soffits built, it’s truly a game changer.
Get those soffits built, it’s truly a game changer.
Gareth
endorka wrote:Source of the post I have formulated a design
That is, indeed, a good way of looking at, when considering the wall as a whole. When standing very close to the door, then the isolation from that door might have a slightly greater influence on what you hear, as opposed to when you have your ear very close to the window. But what you are probably more interested in, is the overall effect for people standing at an arbitrary location out in the room somewhere, or out in the hall somewhere, and your assumption is valid for that: the "weakest link" for any give frequency bnand is most likely what you would hear.One possible way that has occurred to me, inspired by the observation that a relatively small hole in a partition causes for more harm to the sound isolation properties of a partition than its size would suggest. Could this be the worse case? This is to assume that the weakest link in the chain at any point determines the response for the entire partition. This would give the black line in the graph below;
Does this seem like a valid approach? In general it ties in quite well with a real measurement I made of the transmission loss of that partition.