can you use carpet to soundproof a home recording studio?
Author: admin Category: Home Studio SoundproofingI am building a recording studio in my basement. I was interested in buying the foam padding to soundproof it, but someone told me that carpet on the walls to soundproof the recording booth works just as good. I would rather go this route because the foam padding is expensive and I need alot, but I just had my basement carpeted and I have extra carpet that would work perfectly and save me some money.
There are two types of "sound proofing".
Sound proofing usually refers to what you do to a room to keep the sound inside the room. If you don’t want to hear what is going on inside the room in the rest of the house, that would be sound proofing. Carpet will help a little bit with that but to do it the right way you need to build a sturdier wall. Thick, massive walls are best for sound proofing.
If you are trying to eliminate echos inside the studio, that is different than sound proofing. Acoustic foam on the wall is designed for that purpose but it does little to prevent sound from going through the walls. Carpet on the walls will help with echos somewhat. Anything to cut down on hard surfaces inside the studio will help.
There is some good stuff on studio acoustics here:
http://www.acoustics101.com/basics.asp
July 11th, 2010
There are two types of "sound proofing".
Sound proofing usually refers to what you do to a room to keep the sound inside the room. If you don’t want to hear what is going on inside the room in the rest of the house, that would be sound proofing. Carpet will help a little bit with that but to do it the right way you need to build a sturdier wall. Thick, massive walls are best for sound proofing.
If you are trying to eliminate echos inside the studio, that is different than sound proofing. Acoustic foam on the wall is designed for that purpose but it does little to prevent sound from going through the walls. Carpet on the walls will help with echos somewhat. Anything to cut down on hard surfaces inside the studio will help.
There is some good stuff on studio acoustics here:
http://www.acoustics101.com/basics.asp
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