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Just buy two solid doors (recommend insulated exterior fiberglass oak grained doors that can be painted/stained) and a removable mullion (if you have big items to move in/out). Add rubber weather stripping/door sweep as sound seals. If you don't need an extra wide door opening, recommend just buying a pre-hung insulated exterior fiberglass door. If sound transmission is a really big deal, provide two such doors (can be on the same wall with one swinging into the room and the other swinging out of the room, if the wall is thick enough the door handles won't hit or else hinge them on opposite sides of the opening).
Hi Scottdazzle - Appreciate your comments. I recognized your avatar so I must have read some of your previous posts.The room dimensions are already set, as are the decisions to have a drop-ceiling and french doors. I'm also aware that these two items are not at all helping my isolation efforts. But since this is a multi-purpose room that is the path I'm on. However, I have taken some measures to help minimize sound coming in and going out. Not total measures mind you, but things I trust will help after doing a bit of research. Such as; double 5/8" DW, insulation in all walls, between overhead floor joists and offset studs on my primary forward TV wall. The room size is not a rectangle, but is 10' wide at the screen end and 14' at opposite end with and angled wall on one side where the french doors will be. It will be on the small..ish side, but my man-cave nonetheless. My basic question remains... If I haven't taken measures A and B, will C even matter? If I've got 2 big holes in my fishtank (using that analogy) - my drop-ceiling and french doors, does double DW even matter, much less what I put between them? Or, am I simply going after a < 5% additional improvement in isolation, mass, and absorption qualities for which there will be little difference noticed? If I can save $400-600 on GG and use something else because of the minimal % improvement factor, I'd rather spend that same amount on, say, nicer speakers - for instance. Are there other compounds in the marketplace that are similar to GG, cheaper and still work as a damping agent between DW sheets?Rick
Edit: I know GG won't hurt, but will it's benefit be out-weighed, not necessarily negated, by the lack of other isolation measures?
I think that risk exists. I see double drywall onto the structure as a thicker transmitter of vibrations through the wall. So while the added thickness changes the resonant frequency of the wall itself from that of one layer, it is still attached to the structure and you don't get the isolation that truly keeps sound in and out. The GG keeps the walls from vibrating and eats up the transmission through side to side movement of the sheets of drywall (heat, if you will). I never forgot the explanation Bryan P. gave me about what you should shoot for: a large mass that is hard to move isolated from that which would want to move it. So suspending the drywall from the structure is step 1 and adding the mass of 2 layers is step 2, and having any movement of the heavy drywall waste its energy in side to side movement that is rather benign to the intended room quiet is step 3.Your room will still be quieter than normal but you will have missed some opportunities if it is hard attached and is not internally damped. Could be a major moot point if it is large enough that the natural room modes really don't bite you in the end.
...If you're not going to use green glue, my suggestion would be to just go with single drywall and spend the savings on some strategic room treatments after the room is finished. After the room is done and you've set up your system, you'll be able to tell where to make improvements. It's amazing how much improvement a few bass traps and/or a diffusor can make. Much better results than you'd probably get from a slight speaker upgrade.