Okay...you were right

  • Thread starter Thread starter Turnip
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Turnip

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Alright, I'm going to 'fess up. I'm a retard.

You'd think that as someone with two engineering degrees, I'd trust the science before I trusted my hunches.

You guys (especially Bruce and John) are right: egg crates are worthless. I put a layer of egg crate over a 1/4" sheet of sound board, in front of a 1/4" sheet of insulation foam; my thought was that the egg crate would absorb some of the live sound from the room, while the sound board and foam would provide minimal soundproofing (for the neighbor who shares that wall).

The results: the soundproofing effort, though not flawless, has proven pretty effective. The neighbors can't hear anything - even when I've got the amp playing at a reasonable recording volume. The reflections in my room are dampened ever-so-slightly...but not nearly enough to eliminate a noticeable reverb. I found this out last night, after recording for the first time in my new setup.

You were right. I should have listened.

I didn't listen. Now, I have $60 worth of spray-painted mattress liners that I'm going to put under my mattress. My girlfriend's at least pumped about that..she bitches that the bed isn't "squishy" enough as it is.

Now, I have to leave work a little early and jaunt up to the money hole (also known as Guitar Center) to pick up an Auralex Roominator kit.

I wouldn't be audacious enough to use one of Bruce's coined phrases...so, let it be said: egg crates simply don't do squat for deadening a room.

- Tim "That Guy Hanging His Head In Shame" Turnip
 
Hey Tim. Don't add salt, and lots of bucks, to the wound. Drop the roominator kit and go here-

http://www.realtraps.com/

Look specifiaclly at the minitraps and 703/705, not to mention the specs. It seems clear if you want the job done, you gotta get the right tools.

Dan
 
I don't think sleeping on spraypainted foam is very good for the whole skin breathing and sweating thing. I would just throw them away. or sell them to a drummer. it sounded like egg carton shaped foam, not actual egg cartons. im sure some drummer need to dampen their drum so neighbours/parents/roomates don't kill them.
 
kristian said:
I don't think sleeping on spraypainted foam is very good for the whole skin breathing and sweating thing. I would just throw them away. or sell them to a drummer. it sounded like egg carton shaped foam, not actual egg cartons. im sure some drummer need to dampen their drum so neighbours/parents/roomates don't kill them.

I'm going to take them and sell them as a new Halloween costume called "Foam Man."

I actually think I might try sticking some on my toilet seats; difficult to clean (in the event of an accident), but they'll never get cold, and just might lend to a more comfortable "movement" environment.
 
Think of it as a learning experience, and be glad it only cost you $60.

What are your engineering degrees in?
I hold one in Civil Engineering.
 
Michael Jones said:
Think of it as a learning experience, and be glad it only cost you $60.

What are your engineering degrees in?
I hold one in Civil Engineering.

I have a bachelor in Marine Engineering (US Merchant Marine Academy), and a master in systems management (MIT).

I always liked civil stuff; strength of material analysis was particularly intriguing ;)
 
You would have achieved exactly the same result with the soundboard and foam..............without the eggcrates
 
Michael brings up a question I've often wondered about. How many degreed engineers of various fields dabble in recording? I myself have an Electrical Engineering degree, which I got before anyone was offering Audio Engineering degrees (which is what I always wanted to do anyway). It only took me 20 years to get back to tinkering with recording and now I'm obsessed...

Darryl.....
 
DDev said:
Michael brings up a question I've often wondered about. How many degreed engineers of various fields dabble in recording? I myself have an Electrical Engineering degree, which I got before anyone was offering Audio Engineering degrees (which is what I always wanted to do anyway). It only took me 20 years to get back to tinkering with recording and now I'm obsessed...

Darryl.....
I bet there's a lot. Especially you "Double E's".
I actually started off as a music major. :rolleyes: :D But I have an odd habit of wanting to eat and pay bills. So I switched to Civil Engineering and figured I could "fund" my music addiction through that. I guess I ended up with a minor in music, and a major in CE. Odd combination. :p

WOW Turnip, so you have a master's from MIT!!!
I'm impressed. You may just be too classy for the HR.com family of renegades! ;)

:D :D
 
Michael Jones said:

WOW Turnip, so you have a master's from MIT!!!
I'm impressed. You may just be too classy for the HR.com family of renegades! ;)

:D :D

Right. I've learned more about recording in the last few weeks, conversing with the likes of you all, than I could have learned in a decade (as a Systems Management grad student) at M.I.T.

Besides...M.I.T. may be loaded with a lot of brain children - but only a select few of them have any semblance of class, and a good chunk of those wouldn't be able to demonstrate any class in English.

In fact, I've got some great stories from there that fly right in the face of everything that musicians are about. Most of us do this because we have a serious passion for it...and it makes our lives feel complete. M.I.T. kids are there, usually, because studying is the ONLY thing they do well. :)

M.I.T. itself is awesome...but I wouldn't socialize with 98% of the kids who go there. :)
 
im sure alot people in home recordin have degrees or at least inclinations toward the engineering arts- its the whole hands on techie shit- we just gotta know how stuff works- i gotta bs in arch eng. tech- but i'll agree with the above statement that i've learned a ton here
 
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