S
SalJustSal
New member
Hello all,
I work for a local television station in need of acoustical advice. We have a small studio, roughly 20'x30' (although not rectangular). We have a total of 4 LAV (omni-directionals). When one mic is turned on, sound is adequate (although not as dead as to be desired), but when additional mics are turned on, the sound gets increasingly worse with each mic. Our goal is to make the room as dead sounding as possible.
Attached is a studio diagram.
Currently 1" rigid fiber glass sound absorbers are installed on most of the walls facing away from the set. I know that 2" is the ideal number. The set itself is untreated mostly. The green wall (for weather chroma), on the bottom of the diagram is a large 8'x10' flat non-treated wall painted chroma green. I have a feeling a lot of our reflections are coming from this.
Currently our plan of attack is:
-Buying some auralex foam to attach on top of the fiberglass absorbers
1) Is this a good idea? What's the best way to do this? glueing (the covering looks to be a painted canvas)? or pinning?
-Treat the chroma wall. We are thinking of placing some 2" absorption on the wall and creating a floating cloth chroma wall in front of it.
2) Is this a good idea? or would there be a more efficient way of doing this?
3) One concern is treating behind the set. The backdrop is a screen printed canvas, so sound could go through it to be absorbed by some kind of panel behind the set. Is this necessary, since all of the sound from our anchors is directed at the walls away from the studio? or would this be a waste of money.
4) Is sound treatment our only issue? Is there something we can be doing with our mic/board setup to help our problems. I've tried inverting phases, and adding small delays to our mics to help improve any phase shifting issues (since we have 4 omni mics open next to each other) but with little to no results.
I work for a local television station in need of acoustical advice. We have a small studio, roughly 20'x30' (although not rectangular). We have a total of 4 LAV (omni-directionals). When one mic is turned on, sound is adequate (although not as dead as to be desired), but when additional mics are turned on, the sound gets increasingly worse with each mic. Our goal is to make the room as dead sounding as possible.
Attached is a studio diagram.
Currently 1" rigid fiber glass sound absorbers are installed on most of the walls facing away from the set. I know that 2" is the ideal number. The set itself is untreated mostly. The green wall (for weather chroma), on the bottom of the diagram is a large 8'x10' flat non-treated wall painted chroma green. I have a feeling a lot of our reflections are coming from this.
Currently our plan of attack is:
-Buying some auralex foam to attach on top of the fiberglass absorbers
1) Is this a good idea? What's the best way to do this? glueing (the covering looks to be a painted canvas)? or pinning?
-Treat the chroma wall. We are thinking of placing some 2" absorption on the wall and creating a floating cloth chroma wall in front of it.
2) Is this a good idea? or would there be a more efficient way of doing this?
3) One concern is treating behind the set. The backdrop is a screen printed canvas, so sound could go through it to be absorbed by some kind of panel behind the set. Is this necessary, since all of the sound from our anchors is directed at the walls away from the studio? or would this be a waste of money.
4) Is sound treatment our only issue? Is there something we can be doing with our mic/board setup to help our problems. I've tried inverting phases, and adding small delays to our mics to help improve any phase shifting issues (since we have 4 omni mics open next to each other) but with little to no results.