Attachments are back so here is some work in progress.
Recessed bass traps built in to the eaves up first! Before;
Plasterboard removed. Oh no! There is some horizontal wood in the way!
Not to worry though. The old wood along the top was just dwangs for the knee wall plasterboard. As I'll be running OSB along there the can be removed.
For the other bits, I checked with my neighbour who built several houses in our cul-de-sac of a similar design. He said the old wood bar on the right of the photo would have just been used as a temporary fixing to keep the rafters aligned during assembly, and could be safely removed now.
The wood on the left of the photo looks a lot more intentional, and after a bit of puzzling it became obvious that it was intended to be a dwang for mounting a radiator. The radiator has been fixed round the corner though, so it was left unused. So it could also be safely removed.
There are a couple of central heating pipes & electrical cable runs, all fortunately out the way of the planned bass trap boxes. I'm going to add extra clips to the cable to ensure they stay flat on the bit of wood they run on. There was a good amount of insulation in the eaves, there won't be room for it all once the bass trap boxes go in, I can reuse it in the bass traps though.
The wall will have one layer of 18mm OSB with 15mm plasterboard on top, so the wooden floor has to be cut back a bit. I remember a tip Stuart mentioned a while back about doing this with a circular saw. I did it this way, set cutting depth to 18mm so it removed only the top layer of wood, leaving the floor board below intact. It was easy and worked well. Had to chisel out the last few inches into the corner.
Workshop ready for action!
Circular saw guide as per Starlight's recipe;
First cuts are the sides of the "bass bins"