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I trust the double door is a CAD fluke (shouldn't be needed if an exterior grade door is used or if the hallway has another door).
The Kinetics clips are OK - certainly better than nothing. The PAC RSIC-1's are better - less contact, different resonances, etc.As for the floor in a townhouse, yes - the slab will transmit sound pretty well. Look at a product called Dri-Cor. It's sold at Home Depot. It only loses you 3/4" or so, gives you the warmth, the feel of a wood floor, and allows you to build walls on top of it for pretty good isolation at a reasonable price.Bryan
You are fortunate to have 10 foot ceilings as ceiling height is typically the limiting factor in any residental listening room. Looks like a good plan. Don't forget to install a supply air diffuser and to use flexible duct. Remember to account for the reduced airflow compared to sheetmetal ductwork.We built our house with wooden floor trusses, if that's what you've got there's no problem. If they are wooden I-beams, I'd check with the manufacturer to see how they'd recommend fastening to two layers of drywall to them (nailing/screwing a single layer using the RSIC clips shouldn't be a problem).Depending on how cold it gets in the winter where you live and how well the foundation perimeter is insulated, a nice pad/carpet should do the trick.I trust the double door is a CAD fluke (shouldn't be needed if an exterior grade door is used or if the hallway has another door).Will you be surface mounting the wiring as suggested above? Could hurt resale a bit. What's the water table like around the house. Does the sump pump ever run? Is the basement prone to moisture? If it could be a problem I'd go with a large rug (carpets can have a finished border added), and replace the bottom few inches of drywall with foundation grade plywood and/or treated lumber. Of course any framing in direct contact concrete should be treated lumber to start with.
Mike,). The MDF can dry out and catch fire from months/years of dry warm air passing through it.