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#1
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i'm looking for resources of turning my free standing garage/shack
into a studio. it's pretty rough, voids in walls, windows need reframing, as do doors, etc. i have read f alton everest's small budget recording studios with 12 tested designs and jeff coopers building a recording studio. the issues for me are things like where to get cost effective supplies, waterproofing, material for an exterior like siding. i'll be working with a contractor that i trust but he is not a sound person. thanks for any advice. |
#2
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On Aug 27, 7:32*pm, cporro wrote:
i'm looking for resources of turning my free standing garage/shack into a studio. it's pretty rough, voids in walls, windows need reframing, as do doors, etc. i have read f alton everest's small budget recording studios with 12 tested designs and jeff coopers building a recording studio. the issues for me are things like where to get cost effective supplies, waterproofing, material for an exterior like siding. i'll be working with a contractor that i trust but he is not a sound person. thanks for any advice. I will try to help you ,but first a few questions. What do you want to record. Voice overs. Loud rock. Drums, bass, keys .. Next is how close are you to your neighbors house ? In building a studio you need to think of a few things. one is STC= sound trasmission containment. This means if you have a rock trio jamming at 105 db,s inside and a neighbor 100 ft next door you will need to cut down the sound. drywall = about 35 dbs and so on. Also How big is the garage? This would be a start.Glenn. |
#3
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I will try to help you ,but first a few questions. What do you want to
record. Voice overs. Loud rock. Drums, bass, keys .. drums (i'm a light/medium hitter), guitar cabs at decent volumes, vocals. most of this will be tracked separate. would be nice if a medium loud rock band could play/record there. Next is how close are you to your neighbors house ? about 40 ft. there are a few of them. i'm in san francisco so people are used to a certain amount of noise. garbage pickup, there is pretty much constant construction... but my house is in a relatively quite area. i should take some average db readings with my radio shack meter. it has an A curve setting. In building a studio you need to think of a few things. one is STC= sound trasmission containment. This means if you have a rock trio jamming at 105 db,s inside and a neighbor 100 ft next door you will need to cut down the sound. drywall = about 35 dbs and so on. Also How big is the garage? This would be a start.Glenn. the garage is 23'x17' sloping ceiling 11-8ft. it slopes the short way not long. at present the walls are old and badly worn (some holes) redwood siding. the ceiling has old boards (1x10?) with plywood over it and then a shingle roof. i also wanted to have 3 small double pane windows on the face wall (23x11). one solid core 36" door. for ventilation/heating i can't see and cheap way of doing it. so my plan is to takes breaks open windows use fan. i think with insulation heating/cooling will not be a big issue. san francisco is pretty even year round. i will have a small dehumidifier but i also don't consider this a major issue. after my old project studio was moisture proofed the relative humidity was always around 40%. i'm shooting for a stripped down but very usable space. i'm also trying to plan it so modifications can be done as easily as possible down the line. |
#4
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On Aug 27, 10:59*pm, cporro wrote:
I will try to help you ,but first a few questions. What do you want to record. Voice overs. Loud rock. Drums, bass, keys .. drums (i'm a light/medium hitter), guitar cabs at decent volumes, vocals. most of this will be tracked separate. would be nice if a medium loud rock band could play/record there. Next is how close are you to your neighbors *house ? about 40 ft. there are a few of them. i'm in san francisco so people are used to a certain amount of noise. garbage pickup, there is pretty much constant construction... but my house is in a relatively quite area. i should take some average db readings with my radio shack meter. it has an A curve setting. In building a studio you need to think of a few things. one is STC= *sound trasmission containment. This means if you have a rock trio jamming at 105 db,s inside and a neighbor 100 ft next door you will need to cut down the sound. drywall = about 35 dbs and so on. *Also How big is the garage? *This would be a start.Glenn. the garage is 23'x17' sloping ceiling 11-8ft. it slopes the short way not long. at present the walls are old and badly worn (some holes) redwood siding. the ceiling has old boards (1x10?) with plywood over it and then a shingle roof. i also wanted to have 3 small double pane windows on the face wall (23x11). one solid core 36" door. for ventilation/heating i can't see and cheap way of doing it. so my plan is to takes breaks open windows use fan. i think with insulation heating/cooling will not be a big issue. san francisco is pretty even year round. i will have a small dehumidifier but i also don't consider this a major issue. after my old project studio was moisture proofed the relative humidity was always around 40%. i'm shooting for a stripped down but very usable space. i'm also trying to plan it so modifications can be done as easily as possible down the line. Ok it is late in fl. I like those radio shack db meters. The digital readout best. What sounds that go through walls is low end. Kick bass low end of a boomy guitar usually a marshall or a fender twin or like amp with power chords. carpeting sound baffles materials that deaden the sound within the room are nice, but only used to tune a room once massive airtight walls and a ceiling are finished. I used to run drum machine into a bass amp and play it about 100dbs the walk out into my driveway. My closest neighbor was about 40 feet. I had a garage 24x 27 feet. It worked out good. It had 2" of stucco and 2by4 studs. I used 2'x4' 1" sheets thick of spinglass 1000 or some name. This was 22 years ago In San Diego. 3 years ago building this studio I found a place in Orlando that sold packs of 6- 2'x4'x 1" wool for $40 a pack. I used a ton of these. and stuffed between the studs. Then I put 5/8" drywall inside. So I had the stucco wall 2 layers of compressed insulation the 5/8" drywall. Plug in the drum machine took a reading about 6 feet inside at 105 dbs. went outside. It was ok but not enough for me. Next about 12" in I buit a 2x4 floating frame added r-19 then put another layer of drywall. That was enough. A room within a room. I think I had a guitarist who played for the Red hot chili peppers overs once. His Marshall half stack you could still hear in the back yard. But in most cases unless late at night. 20 years and about 100 albums no complaints. Now I am back at a commercial building. The noise outside of semi trucks is a bitch to keep out of my place. Ceilings are a bitch. To get up there. If you put too much weight it will sag without cross beams. Cooling also is a problem. If you have a nice place with all that insulation 4 hot bodies playing rnr for awhile it will heat up. Even Lead walls over 95 percent of the building with 1 3'x3 window with a stc rating of 30-50dbs will really reduce all your efforts 1/2" glass dead air space and 3/8" or 3/4" angeled.works. Ac needs am intack andoutake i think. I used a two ton. Solid core doors with good seals around them 40 to 50 db. Two entry doors with 3 feet inbetween is what I used. No weak spots. finally are you going to us a 7"x 20 for a control room. that will help block sound . Control rooms are not as loud as the playing room. Ok that a lot see ya. Glenn. |
#5
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cporro wrote:
drums (i'm a light/medium hitter), guitar cabs at decent volumes, vocals. most of this will be tracked separate. would be nice if a medium loud rock band could play/record there. about 40 ft. there are a few of them [neighbors]. i'm in san francisco so people are used to a certain amount of noise. garbage pickup, there is pretty much constant construction... but my house is in a relatively quite area. i should take some average db readings with my radio shack meter. it has an A curve setting. You might be able to keep legal by reading your SPL meter, but people will notice music even at a pretty low level. I'm afraid that you're going to have a pretty expensive soundproofing job ahead of you. You can save some money by doing construction yourself, but without building a solid box inside your garage (including overhead) your band will always be heard by your neighbors. The Everest book is a good guide. Talk the various isolation approaches over with your builder and he should be able to locate the resilient materials that you'll need. Don't even think about starting without at least $20,000 to spend on materials and labor. Not only walls, but you'll need acoustic treatment, wiring, ventilation, and finishing. -- If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) |
#6
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cporro wrote:
I will try to help you ,but first a few questions. What do you want to record. Voice overs. Loud rock. Drums, bass, keys .. drums (i'm a light/medium hitter), guitar cabs at decent volumes, vocals. most of this will be tracked separate. would be nice if a medium loud rock band could play/record there. The problem is that drums are one of the hardest things to record well in a small room. All I can suggest is that you build out as much as possible, build your ceiling up as high as possible, and try and get as live a room as you can get without having obvious slapback. That probably means splayed out walls and a whole lot of diffusion. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#7
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cporro wrote:
i'm looking for resources of turning my free standing garage/shack into a studio. it's pretty rough, voids in walls, windows need reframing, as do doors, etc. i have read f alton everest's small budget recording studios with 12 tested designs and jeff coopers building a recording studio. the issues for me are things like where to get cost effective supplies, waterproofing, material for an exterior like siding. i'll be working with a contractor that i trust but he is not a sound person. thanks for any advice. I did a similar project a couple of years ago, except that my garage was being used only for drum practice and not recording. Personally, I think you will have trouble making good sounding drum recordings in a small room. Generally speaking, the smaller the room, the boxier and less life like drum recordings sound. Nonetheless, check out what I did and reuse whatever is appropriate for your situation. http://www.whealy.com/drumming/Soundproofing/index.html Chris W -- The voice of ignorance speaks loud and long, But the words of the wise are quiet and few. --- |
#8
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On Aug 28, 7:57 am, Chris Whealy wrote:
cporro wrote: i'm looking for resources of turning my free standing garage/shack into a studio. it's pretty rough, voids in walls, windows need reframing, as do doors, etc. i have read f alton everest's small budget recording studios with 12 tested designs and jeff coopers building a recording studio. the issues for me are things like where to get cost effective supplies, waterproofing, material for an exterior like siding. i'll be working with a contractor that i trust but he is not a sound person. thanks for any advice. I did a similar project a couple of years ago, except that my garage was being used only for drum practice and not recording. Personally, I think you will have trouble making good sounding drum recordings in a small room. Generally speaking, the smaller the room, the boxier and less life like drum recordings sound. Nonetheless, check out what I did and reuse whatever is appropriate for your situation. http://www.whealy.com/drumming/Soundproofing/index.html Chris W -- The voice of ignorance speaks loud and long, But the words of the wise are quiet and few. --- Make yourself comfortable, brew a big pot of coffee, get some pencils and paper standing by and then go to this forum: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/index.php Read thru as many of the stickies as you can, then dive into those threads that seem germane. Don't post simplistic questions until you have researched through their archives, or the forum leaders will eat you. Consider buying "Ron's book" that you'll hear talked about a lot on the forum: "Home Recording Studios: Build it like the pros". There is a TREMENDOUSLY HUGE amount of info the you will see that people go to ridiculous extremes with their home studios, but you will literally find out more than you ever wanted to know about how to do pretty exactly what you are proposing there. In other words, if you dig enough you'll find the the construction "story" of someone with a very similar situation to yours. Philip Perkins |
#9
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ok, i bought rod's book. after reading reviews it seemed like a book
that might cover things from a different angle from my other stuff. maybe it will have more specifics on where to buy materials. i also signed up for the forum. my budget is 15k. so maybe i can't do it all now. but i can start v1. i will have an acoustic kits in there. but i am also looking into realistic electronic kits. things with good samples and triggers. that could be an option if things sound boxy. on the plus side the 2 largest faces are splayed. roof is probably 20 degrees. thanks all for the info...i'll start slowly digesting. |
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