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Sealing the door bottom will be the hardest part, a sweep will rub a line on the floor and may not be soundproof. Usually there is an alignment bracket on the floor that fits into a slot in the door bottom to keep the door from swinging. A bracket on both sides of the door would allow the use of an automatic door bottom. The door would take a little force to close and latch because of the spring in the door bottom but the weatherstrip would drop down and seal tight.
Geez I don't know if this qualifies - a man cave afterall does infer subterranean and lacking a view after all!I guess we'll have to let you go on it though, since you also said listening room. Looks like it will provide a lovely space for audio fun.Will this be a 2 channel space, or an HT? Subs involved in either case? Do you like it loud, and do those that share your dwelling object?All play into how far you need to take it, to achieve isolation. A door like the one you are referencing - how thick are they? Do they vibrate easily with airborne vibration from bass?Thanks for this thread, I'll be all over this!
Neat!Looking forward to watching it grow.
Thanks, ill try to keep up to date.
Thanks Jim, ceiling height is 10'. Might talk to the pro's after room is built about treatments, but diy for now. Kinda hoping good construction will keep treatments to a minimum.
You may find it harder to insulate with Roxul now though, you'll have a lot of cuts to make to fit around the extra studs etc, but in my install in the basement, the Roxul was well worth the effort in ceiling and interior walls.
Not really, just use standard 3.5" R13 on each side. Yes -you have to insulate once on each side but shouldn't have to cut any more than normal.Bryan