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Thanks for the suggestions. The cardas guidelines for room design and speaker placement are quite interesting. Have you followed his recommendations in your own setup?
Hi folks:I'd like to pick the circle's collective brain for sound control ideas for a new house that we are currently planning. The house will have a conditioned crawl space and a partial basement. The basement section will have space for a small music-listening room at some point. Above the basement will be a master suite area and a TV room (among other things). Above this floor will be my office and a guest room.My wife and I both hate hearing the kinds of noise transmissions that are typical in most homes. Flushing and draining sounds. Foot steps. Extraneous noise from whatever.We will have lots of hard surfaces and few if any window coverings. It's an aesthetics things. Here are some things I'm considering to address sound throughout the house.Using Green Glue joist tape to reduce creaks and squeeks under wood flooring.Using Green Glue Silent FX, QuietRock, or similar products in strategic areas to reduce transmission between rooms and floors.Using some form of clip and channel system to decouple some rooms and/or ceilings.Using cast iron for all drain lines.Sealing electrical outlets and concealed lights (also to conserve energy). The house will also be energy sealed to meet the higher end of current conservation standards.So let me know if you agree or disagree with this approach and feel to blue sky alternative strategies for taming the sound beast.
Yes, fully. Room is 8 x 13 x 22 with nearfield/equalateral setup. Imaging snaps into place within a foot of the "sweet spot". My 8 inch single driver speakers (no whizzer cone) beam highs, but allow "aiming". With transmission line loading bass is deep, fast, and roll-off matches room gain nicely. Overall little room interaction. Addition of six GIK 244 panels, no matter how/where I try them, makes little improvement. I have 3 tall bookcases on side walls to add diffusion and an office setup in the back. When I first moved in the amount of acoustic isolation was almost spooky (except for those darn recessed can light fixtures and the builder refused to float [clip] the drywall ceiling).Although Floyd Toole barely believes in "proper ratios". In his opinion an average (American/Canadian) decor in almost any number of rectangular room proportions is OK. His big issue is standing bass waves and supports multiple subs at opposite ends of the room to cancel them out. His other big issue is providing good sound throughout the room (as big of a sweet spot as possible).
I'd spend a good of time investigating iron drains/sewer pipes. One of my best friends is a plumber with several decades of experience. This may be geography dependent, however, he is anti-iron v. PVC or PEX because iron simply does not last as long in the ground. Between some movement and soil composition yielding a dielectric issue iron is very reliable to 20yrs. less reliable to 30 and unreliable after 30. He replaced the iron sewer pipe running from my house to the street five years ago - it was 33 or 34 years old and looked like it has lost 60/70% of its original mass. That ordeal set me back $14K.Iron sewer pipes can act as antenna for power nasties. An acquaintance, while not an audiophile, is a jazz guitar player. He bought a new home in Far North Dallas a few years ago and immediately noticed his guitar amps hummed like crazy. Crap gotta go more later....