
Folkcafe
Well-known member
All ears. That's pretty funny.
15x13 is not a bad size. You should think about not dividing it up even more. consider making it dual purpose and track with phones. A bit more work to isolate noise sources but will likely give you better sonic results.
My control room is only slightly larger (18x13). It had the same problem with a real bad ping pong flutter Echo. I treated it live-end dead end and broke up the narrow sides with some absorption panels and it did the trick. The picture links above show that I did not have to cover everything to get the desired result. One mistake is to over do it. The small rooms are likely to be a bigger problem.
Maybe John has some links to where you can find some of the spreadsheet calculators that will give you some ideas as to where the nodes are likely to be with your room dimensions. I can't find the ones I used. My concern going in was bass. I was more worried that I would have problems in the lower spectrum that wouldn't be easy to deal with. Fortunately my big bumps were all in the range that a bit of fiberglass could take care of.
There is no such thing as a completely dead room. Most overtreated rooms have a big lower mid bump that can just be havoc in recordings. Foam and fiberglass start to loose effectivness as the freq goes lower. The trick is to make the room sound "normal" not dead.
Don Goguen
Folk Cafe Productions
15x13 is not a bad size. You should think about not dividing it up even more. consider making it dual purpose and track with phones. A bit more work to isolate noise sources but will likely give you better sonic results.
My control room is only slightly larger (18x13). It had the same problem with a real bad ping pong flutter Echo. I treated it live-end dead end and broke up the narrow sides with some absorption panels and it did the trick. The picture links above show that I did not have to cover everything to get the desired result. One mistake is to over do it. The small rooms are likely to be a bigger problem.
Maybe John has some links to where you can find some of the spreadsheet calculators that will give you some ideas as to where the nodes are likely to be with your room dimensions. I can't find the ones I used. My concern going in was bass. I was more worried that I would have problems in the lower spectrum that wouldn't be easy to deal with. Fortunately my big bumps were all in the range that a bit of fiberglass could take care of.
There is no such thing as a completely dead room. Most overtreated rooms have a big lower mid bump that can just be havoc in recordings. Foam and fiberglass start to loose effectivness as the freq goes lower. The trick is to make the room sound "normal" not dead.
Don Goguen
Folk Cafe Productions