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Another potential source for noise is possible electrical power aberrations (dirty power). At a minimum run dedicated audio circuit(s) and if possible use a separate ground.* And splurge for a hospital grade wall receptacle (they grip harder, especially the red ones).* Ideally you'll live in a rural neighborhood with a new substation, have your own underground feed/transformer, and have all new appliances as these are all sources of electrical power aberations.5/8 inch drywall is good, doubling it up is even better. But reducing the stud spacing could be even better as halving the spacing will increase stiffness 16-fold. Some recommend varying the spacing between 8 and 16 inches, again to randomize any reverberation from the walls.Hopefully those pantry/stairwell doors will be solid core (seals can be added). And be sure to fill in any windows.
Bob,At the recommendation of a audiophile/electrician the three circuits that serve my audio system have their own grounding rod. I don't know nothing about electrical, but it passed the mustard of the nasty electrical inspector.
So, I should install fiberglass insulation on the inner wall, and 2x 5/8" drywall on all walls and ceiling?As for adding an extra or isolated ground rod.... that is a very bad suggestion and whoever your electrician and electrical Inspector is, they should be reprimanded...this is a very dangerous practice and against code.How do I know? I have been a Journeyman electrician for over 20 years, IBEW local 112.
http://www.rivesaudio.com/services/servframe.html
Note that hospital operating rooms for decades used isolated grounding systems (due to the risk of explosion from flammable anesthetics). And (again I'm ignorant of electrical) we have a whole house surge protector. So I'm not worried about running a separate ground. As a licensed engineer with the first 8 years spent doing structural, what I would be very worried about is your reference to 2x6 floor joists spanning 18 feet. The only wooden things that should span 18 feet are huge timbers, large laminated beams, engineered I-joists, or trusses.
Bryan,From my understanding of structural dynamics you're right, larger spacing would lower resonant frequency, but would also make it easier to vibrate.
I installed a 12"x7"x18.5' LVL that spans the area where the wall/archway once was. I cut the ceiling joists so that the LVL would fit into them and up against the floor above, making it even stronger.