0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 7797 times.
Would it be an advantage to go with a slightly raised strand-wood floor (the raised floor could be covered by area rugs or carpet), to improve the "feel of the subwoofer"? Or am I better off with carpet over the cement floor?
Should I go dropped-panel ceiling or drywall?
Would there be any advantage to incorporate one of the concrete walls into the room?
I have enough room to fit a slightly modified version of Carda's Golden Golden Trapagon
QuoteWould it be an advantage to go with a slightly raised strand-wood floor (the raised floor could be covered by area rugs or carpet), to improve the "feel of the subwoofer"? Or am I better off with carpet over the cement floor?I'd leave it carpet on concrete. If a slightly raised floor is a little better - and I'm not sure it is - the improvement won't be enough to warrant the extra cost. Better to put that money into other things.
I don't like the way the windows are going to be on the front wall behind the speakers or the door if you flip it.
Can you use the room on the side that looks more like 20' x 30'? It' would also be away from pipes on the bathroom (yes you can hear water going through pipes).
If I had my way from scratch, I would design and build diffusion into the rear and side walls. I would drop the ceiling and employ acoustic tiles. I would also employ bass trapping in the corners above the ceiling. I would do the same on every corner if I had false walls with cavity behind.
At the same time, I would fill in an area with concrete where you can spike your equipment rack to.
I would put in zero surge surge protection on the lines if you live in area with prevalent power problems.
Water running, people walking, dishwashers, washing machines, duct noise, etc. Those are the kinds of sounds that will infiltrate the room.
If you're going to do a tile ceiling, I'd do a wood floor (finished) and plan for a nice rug between you and the speakers. Having a carpeted floor AND a tile ceiling is a ton of high frequency only absorption. Add in reflection point coverage and general decay time control and IMO the room will be too dead in the highs.
Please keep your comments coming. Not to sound defensive, but cost is also a factor. So here is some of my rational for option 1. If I'm wrong, please set me straight.Quote from: bpape on 17 Jul 2007, 06:08 pmWater running, people walking, dishwashers, washing machines, duct noise, etc. Those are the kinds of sounds that will infiltrate the room.We are renting a house with the same construction. Ducking for the main floor comes from the attic and ceiling, so really the basement is very quite.Quote from: bpape on 17 Jul 2007, 06:08 pmIf you're going to do a tile ceiling, I'd do a wood floor (finished) and plan for a nice rug between you and the speakers. Having a carpeted floor AND a tile ceiling is a ton of high frequency only absorption. Add in reflection point coverage and general decay time control and IMO the room will be too dead in the highs.I will already have the carpet at no charge, so I'd like to use it (we are ripping out carpet from the main floor to replace with hardwoods). So to keep costs down, if it's not too bad, I could go carpet on floor and drywall on ceiling.Basically if I finish off the drywall on option 1, use my existing carpet, add some basic electrical and needed HVAC, I should be able to get by for pretty cheap. I could even do the drywall myself to save $. Adding a wall in front of the windows would be pretty cheap too.So more bucks for big differences are worth considering. Marginal difference probably not worth it to me. And I can always use room treatments to help balance out the room (assuming it has no fatal flaws that can't be overcome). Any recommendation for ceiling height?
Quote from: Alwayswantmore on 17 Jul 2007, 06:36 pmPlease keep your comments coming. Not to sound defensive, but cost is also a factor. So here is some of my rational for option 1. If I'm wrong, please set me straight.Quote from: bpape on 17 Jul 2007, 06:08 pmWater running, people walking, dishwashers, washing machines, duct noise, etc. Those are the kinds of sounds that will infiltrate the room.We are renting a house with the same construction. Ducking for the main floor comes from the attic and ceiling, so really the basement is very quite.Quote from: bpape on 17 Jul 2007, 06:08 pmIf you're going to do a tile ceiling, I'd do a wood floor (finished) and plan for a nice rug between you and the speakers. Having a carpeted floor AND a tile ceiling is a ton of high frequency only absorption. Add in reflection point coverage and general decay time control and IMO the room will be too dead in the highs.I will already have the carpet at no charge, so I'd like to use it (we are ripping out carpet from the main floor to replace with hardwoods). So to keep costs down, if it's not too bad, I could go carpet on floor and drywall on ceiling.Basically if I finish off the drywall on option 1, use my existing carpet, add some basic electrical and needed HVAC, I should be able to get by for pretty cheap. I could even do the drywall myself to save $. Adding a wall in front of the windows would be pretty cheap too.So more bucks for big differences are worth considering. Marginal difference probably not worth it to me. And I can always use room treatments to help balance out the room (assuming it has no fatal flaws that can't be overcome). Any recommendation for ceiling height?Carpet floor and drywall ceiling will be fine. As for ceiling height, as high as you can get it.Bryan