R
RAMI
Guest
4/20 is always the answer.I think that was 420.
4/20 is always the answer.I think that was 420.
Auralex LENRD Bass Traps - Charcoal (8) - Long & McQuade Musical Instruments
Anyone have any opinions on these bass traps. You get 8 so I was thinking of 2 stacked up in each corner.
Those will not work. There is a way to use them though. Get a sheet of 3/4" ply, stain it nice, cut it into four 12" x 8 foot lengths, one for each corner.Measure out from the corner about 18 inches an attach it angled back toward the other wall. attach the two foam traps to the inside in the middle. Then wad up some soft fleece blankets in the two 2 foot areas left. Other than that, use the right stuff and make your own. I set up bass traps in a friend's studio by wadding up leftover canvas drop clothes and stapling them to the back of four long triangle cut sound-stop and leaning them up in the corner. They worked fine and were really cheap.
Rod Norman
Engineer
Say what???
Oh man, if we start breaking down everything wrong with that or any, of his posts, we'd be here for days.I'm not sure how creating a new corner to treat would help in treating a corner...
No, you're not wrong. Hard surface = reflecting surface.I'm a complete noob at this stuff and even to me that advise sounds like you'd be building a reflector of sorts . . .am I wrong?
Yes you are wrong, kind of. Norman is talking about trying to deal with very low frequency sound. Sound that will pass through the plywood. Some frequencies will be reflected by the plywood some won't. It's very complex.
He's describing a corner trap.Norman said take the plywood, strip it to 12" wide, set it up 18" from the corner then "angled back toward the other wall" - not sure what this means but there will be a gap on either side of the plywood - put the foam behind the plywood and stuff the rest with old blankets. Sorry, this is not good advice, even if the plywood will pass through the bass frequencies.