fluted soundproofing panel?
Does anyone has any experience in installing this for your home studio? how will it affect the sound of your playing? Generally we want to have the echo-ey sound of playing in a church or a large hall way. Will installing those soundproof panel mute the sound?
-
Most of the cheap and thin panels won't help for a better sound and would probably make it worst. It also depends of your room configuration and dimensions, for a small room under 30'x30' I fear the only interesting solution is absorption to make it almost dead. If the material is not enough thick and dense it won't absorb what you need and if they instead reflect or diffuse then the frequencies will rebound to another wall, and the problem persist. In a bad sounding room you'll never be able to have a church-like sound naturally, and if you apply a reverb plugin from a take of this non-treated room you'll only amplify the worst sound. Like you I tried multiple solutions until I figured out I had to really treat my studio room to upgrade my sound.
-
Hi Don - You don't mention the size or shape of your room or what specific panels you're planning to use, but as a sound engineer I can share my thoughts. The "mistake" I see many making is putting thin (1"-2") foam panels or carpet or even mattresses up on their walls. This ends up just cutting down the higher frequencies and can lead to a dead-sounding room that's not much fun to work in. In most rooms not built for sound, like most square or rectangular home studios, a combination of high frequency and broadband absorption, bass trapping (usually in the room corners), and controlled diffusion to help scatter reflections is needed. It gets to be a pretty involved and complicated subject. And unless you have a large room to start with, you won't achieve a church or hall sound naturally anyway.
I've had good luck in the past controlling my home studios with ASC Tube Traps. https://www.acousticsciences.com/
But they're fairly pricey and you have to experiment to find the best placement for them. I even had some of them suspended from the ceiling to help control floor-to-ceiling reflections. One nice thing is they're not built in so you can take them with you if you move.
There are quite a few other companies offering solutions these days, and I believe some of them make suggestions based on dimensions/drawings you send them.
You may not achieve the large room sound with these treatments, but at least you can have a room that's enjoyable to work in and can provide you an acceptable recording space.
Then just add a nice reverb!
-
I'm guessing there are some missing decimal points, otherwise your room is a not-so-small 6555 square feet! If it's more like ~70sf, then yeah that's a small room that will never sound like a church or a hall. You may find some treatments that will at least make it enjoyable for you to play in. But treating it so the sound doesn't "escape" that room and bother others is a whole different problem, and probably harder to solve.