I’m building a home recording studio! Can anyone give me advice on soundproofing?
Author: admin Category: Home Studio SoundproofingI’m building a recording studio in the garage in my back garden. It’s not that big but it’s going to have a live room and a small control room and is big enough to fit a drum kit in. Should be pretty cool when it’s done.
I was just wondering if you had any advice on how I’d go about soundproofing the thing? Since I’m going to have drums in there and live in a residential area I need to make it as quiet as possible!
I’ve never soundproofed anything before so any help/advice would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers.
Caulk all cracks, insulate walls and ceiling, cover ceiling walls and floor with soft material like carpet, mount egg carton trays randomly on walls and ceiling (use 2" styrofoam blocks to space away from wall/ceiling).
September 2nd, 2009
You can get batts that are special made in high density for sound proofing in walls.In the ceiling you can also gradually put up old egg trays (the ones that hold about 40 eggs) as well. The shape of them is perfect for accoustics and the soft cardboard material is highly absorbent. They need to be sealed, not painted. after a year or so to stop the card breaking down.Carpet the floor, even with a loose lay.
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X broadcaster
September 2nd, 2009
Caulk all cracks, insulate walls and ceiling, cover ceiling walls and floor with soft material like carpet, mount egg carton trays randomly on walls and ceiling (use 2" styrofoam blocks to space away from wall/ceiling).
References :
September 2nd, 2009
Isolate the exterior siding from the interior drywall - often this is done with staggered 2×4 studs on 2×6 plates - this is so vibration of the interior surfaces isn’t transmitted outside. Rock the inside with high density sheetrock, use two layers taping seams on both and staggering the seams. You can add mass loaded vinyl between layers if you really want to go all out. As another poster said, caulk all cracks, caulk plates to floor and drywall to drywall at ceiling. Use a good quality exterior door with good weatherstripping.
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