Don't Trust Your Contractor WITH SOUNDPROOFING

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 มิ.ย. 2024
  • I hired a contractor to install drywall, along with resilient channels on the ceiling, in my basement music studio. I've had more impact noise than I expected, and decided to rip out the ceiling and build it again. As I was removing the old ceiling I discovered that the contractor's work was worse than I expected.
    I'm building a music studio in my basement! Watch the full series here: • Basement Music Studio ...
    Recommended Books
    Home Recording Studio: Build it Like the Pros (Rod Gervais)
    Master Handbook of Acoustics (F. Alton Everest & Ken C. Pohlmann)
    Questions we're tackling in this video series:
    How to build a music studio.
    How to build a music studio in a basement.
    How to build a music studio in a home.
    How to soundproof a room.
    How to isolate a music room from the rest of the house.
    How to build a soundproof door.
    How to build acoustic treatment.
    How to build acoustic panels.
    How to build bass traps.
    #homestudio #basementstudio #musicstudio #acoustics #acoustictreatment #acousticpanels #basstraps #soundproofing #soundisolation #recording #mixing #guitar #vocals
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ความคิดเห็น • 60

  • @helmanfrow
    @helmanfrow 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    One thing that bears constant repeating is that building to high standards of acoustical isolation is a _highly specialized_ undertaking which demands a fanatical attention to detail and significantly more time and effort than standard construction. A tiny mistake can wreak havoc on the final product just like a small hole in your hull can sink your boat. Most contractors-through no fault of their own-are simply not educated in the fundamental principles of sound transmission loss and are likely to do things the way they've always done them unless guided by a firm hand.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  15 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      This.
      This is what my video is about. Showing how easily things can go wrong. I had multiple conversations with the contractor and his crew. I could tell they had limited experience, but it wasn’t their first time installing resilient channels. I talked with them about how to install resilient channels, how the drywall would be overlapped, and where to use the acoustic sealant. As I discovered, those conversations didn’t stick. I should have checked their work at every step instead of trusting that they followed my instructions.
      The only disagreement I would say is that there is some fault on the contractor. In our initial conversations the contractor was trying to teach me about soundproofing. He eventually realized I knew more about the subject, but he still had trouble accepting my ideas. This is the part of the industry culture that sets everyone up for failure. Stick to what you know and don’t try to teach homeowners about things you don’t understand. You can see it in some of the other comments, how quickly contractors come to the defence of the contractor I had, or even saying how I should be building the ceiling. Unless you live in a city like Nashville, very few contractors have built soundproof rooms, and even fewer have done proper testing of the results at the end. Yet most are quick to share their “wisdom”.

    • @PotatoesRnice
      @PotatoesRnice 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      "most contracts are not educated" that's how I would have put it.

    • @PotatoesRnice
      @PotatoesRnice 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@simonbaxtermusic So do you think one would need to use acoustic sealant between the bottom edge of cornices and a brick wall.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@PotatoesRniceyou have a brick wall in your studio? I’m not sure I understand the example as it relates to soundproofing.

    • @PotatoesRnice
      @PotatoesRnice 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@simonbaxtermusic well actually I have 4 brick walls in my studio. So I am wondering about the joint between the plasterboards and the brick walls. I am using isolation mounts on ceiling

  • @mrturtle7263
    @mrturtle7263 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    As a professional acoustics consultant, I have seen most of these issues more times than I can count. It's a specialist field for a reason, and even with professional consultation, it's all too easy to mess up the install if you're not extremely careful. A good learning experience to always supervise the contractor unless they are experts in the area.
    It sounds like you know your stuff, and you are absolutely right about a lot of the points in the video. To address another comment, mass is crucial - two layers of boards are always better than one, not just for the mass, but also because it reduces the weak points between boards (as long as they are staggered properly).
    If you are still having issues with impact noise after fixing the ceiling, a floating floor upstairs will be a huge help. You can also look at the GypFloor Silent systems (British Gypsum, or an American equivalent) - these help to isolate the floor above from the joists, and add mass, with the advantage of only raising the floor height by a few mm.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thanks for the feedback and kind words. I read The Master Handbook of Acoustics and Rod Gervais' Home Recording Studio: Build It Like The Pros. This is my chance to finally put all that knowledge to the test.
      I've seen the GypFloor system before. I am hoping I'll get the chance to do something like that in the future. My wife and I will eventually do some main floor renovations, and that's when I'm most likely to give it a shot. I'm looking forward to testing the isolation after the doors are finished so I can get an accurate picture of what's still coming through the ceiling.

  • @MattyDaddy14
    @MattyDaddy14 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Def one thing I got from this video and have learned from other videos, is that those resilient channels don’t really work out that great with weight plus the screws going all the way thru. The sound clips with the rubber gasket seems to be a way better albeit more expensive solution. 🎉 good video! 🎉

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Completely agree. I was trying to save ceiling height, but I’m rebuilding it with the isolation clips after all. Not worth the hassle.

  • @맨두
    @맨두 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    subscribed to see how much difference the sound isolation clips make. Would love to see you do some test while having someone walk upstairs. Great videos!

  • @nathangardner772
    @nathangardner772 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    In your contract, you could have had a list of every single little detail with 3d drawings of each critical overlap, transition, key locations etc. the contractor could have provided a list of each of these too along with their quote. All of this of course had anybody realized the depth of a proper install. I’ve been remodeling for 25 years. I specialize in custom finish carpentry. Extremely detailed person. You will NEVER get the result you want unless you do all your research and all your work yourself. I walk into peoples houses and immediately to myself I’m picking apart the trim work. 😂 I’d advise any further projects you take on with details like this. Don’t even spend time looking for a contractor. Do it on your own.
    Also. If you don’t know anything about drywall, guess what you’re learning.
    If you don’t have a tool for that, guess what you’re buying.
    You can’t get the material to the job, guess what you’re figuring out.

  • @BluesMan1234
    @BluesMan1234 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I'm currently in the planning stages of my DIY basement home studio and your videos have so insightful. Thank you!

  • @EWTHeckman
    @EWTHeckman 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I'm working on a project of my own which started by removing plaster over drywall from the walls. I found that a diamond wheel for an angle grinder plus an attachment that essentially turned the angle grinder into a circular saw let me do the cutting and connect a vacuum to capture the dust. (My angle grinder and attachment are made by Makita.) It made for a MUCH cleaner work environment.

  • @willwyatt9801
    @willwyatt9801 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I feel for you, Ive been in this exact same situation before.
    Not only is it a waste of money and your time but it’s terrible for the environment, just look at all of that unnecessary waste.
    In my experience it’s only specialist sound proofing company’s that will do as good as job as you, it will cost more but it’s worth it.

  • @treystills
    @treystills 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Great post thank you!

  • @amendippanesar
    @amendippanesar 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Man that is brutal my friend sorry you had to go thru that

  • @STOJATEK
    @STOJATEK 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    For sheet rock (drywall), use a box cutter next time to make your cuts, a lot less dust than using a circular saw. Also, for sound dampening, utilize Rockwool Sound insulation. It's incredibly great for that, as well as fire rated up to 2150°F. Now for the air gaps between the rafters/drywall/etc.. use zip system flex/stretch tape and roll it on. It'll create an air barrier that's incredibly tight.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Good to know about the box cutter, though hopefully I won’t need to do this again. 😁 I do have 2 layers of rockwool in the ceiling and more in the walls. The stretch tape would be a lot easier for air sealing. I had to look it up didn’t know what it was.

  • @InspiredCraftsman
    @InspiredCraftsman 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Rockwool or dense pack cellulose in the cavities. Perpendicular furing strips to attach the ceiling reduces bridging, layer of mass loaded vinyl, decoupling membrane, then drywall.

    • @A-Sidhu
      @A-Sidhu 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      resilient channel is better for decoupling versus furring strips.

  • @michaellalanae7228
    @michaellalanae7228 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    You need sound board installed,

  • @Hanniere
    @Hanniere 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I've just have gone through this hasle, I let the contract know about the correct way to install resilient channels, screw sizes etc and wasn't enough, caught a lot of channels short circuiting agains the wall, 1"1/4 screws hitting the joists, resilient channels on wall upside down. I got them to fix most things but I'm sure there's still screws hitting studs somewhere, ceiling drywall that's butt up against the adjacent wall. In my case it's a legal basement suite so I decided to let it go, next time I'll do this myself because it's not worth it getting people to learn and understand the correct way of doing it, they don't care.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It’s so disappointing explaining the right way to do things and then they do it the wrong way. There are good contractors, but just as many poor ones it seems.

  • @h3lio5
    @h3lio5 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    That’s super frustrating, I’ve always avoided contractors for reasons like that. Bailey resilient channel works reasonably well if installed correctly, but is super unforgiving (I’ve done 4 rooms with it). Though, I once had a house with 9’ ceilings in the basement, so I ran a separate set of joists on top of 8’ walls in a “room within a room” concept. It was awesome.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      That is the dream build! If I had the ceiling height I definitely would have built a detached ceiling.

    • @carlosizurieta885
      @carlosizurieta885 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      “Avoid Contractors”??? so who are you going to contract when you need plumbing? Who are you going to contract when you need a roof done or to build you a custom home? Maybe you guys are just looking at the wrong guys that are calling themselves contractors with no experience.

    • @h3lio5
      @h3lio5 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@carlosizurieta885 I meant specifically for soundproofing applications. It’s a super niche specialty and easy to get wrong.
      But, since you brought it up, for plumbing, electrical, and framing projects a homeowner can pull their own permits in my area. Code books aren’t hard to read and a lot of things you’re going to do in a house can be accomplished with a handful of tools and/or rentals (or at least that’s been my experience in many, many years of home ownership). I enjoy doing the work myself, the projects move on my timeline, and I have yet to fail an inspection for anything.
      Do I think I’m as good as a pro? Certainly not, but the work I do is good enough, and there are a ome things I won’t mess around with, like structural repairs since I’m not a p.eng, but yeah. Now, if you have no interest in doing any of that, by all means go find a contractor.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@carlosizurieta885not at all what I said. The title is “don’t trust your contractor WITH SOUNDPROOFING“. In the video I say to be careful which tasks you do vs the contractor, and if the contractor is doing anything soundproofing related check their work. I used an HVAC contractor for my studio and they were fantastic.

  • @acousticillusive
    @acousticillusive 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Yes, sound issolation clips better than resilient channel. problem is, without mass and air space, you still won't hardly touch/eliminate bass low freq energy transfer!!! You can float walls/floor/ceiling all you want, but that rumbling from the trash truck outside or semi passing by will surely go right through any structure that's not heavy loaded barrier, plus air gap (larger distance gap the better), plus issolated stick frame construction plus treated drywall! Been here before myself when starting out in acoustics. Trial and error if you DIY, absolutely!

  • @jamIam6548
    @jamIam6548 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I remember the first time i swung a hammer

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  18 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Never said I had the best technique 🤣

  • @bryandensley6220
    @bryandensley6220 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    That's terrible. I hope you let the contractor know that because they didn't follow your instructions you are basically redoing everything they did. Honestly they should have to redo it.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  22 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Honestly, I’m happier doing it myself than working with that contractor again. They did our whole basement and the end result is fine (apart from what I showed in this video), but trying to discuss anything with him nearly ended in an argument. He told me multiple times that I didn’t know how things work, and he was always looking for opportunities to charge more because this or that wasn’t part of the deal. And many other problems along the way.

  • @PotatoesRnice
    @PotatoesRnice 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    This is not a safe amount of dust to expose yourself to or an adequate mask.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You’re probably right

    • @PotatoesRnice
      @PotatoesRnice 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@simonbaxtermusic check yourself before you wreck yourself, cos dust in your lungs is bad for yo health

  • @Johan.E
    @Johan.E 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    * Don't Trust Your Contractor WITH ANYTHING

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I've had success with other contractors on typical home projects. Soundproofing is a specialized field though, and easy for regular contractors to underestimate.

  • @gtx2.558
    @gtx2.558 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    With this framing u will never have real good Soundproof even If the contractor did Not These mistakes.
    U Need build a free hanging construction or atleast a suspended ceeiling because u Not want the drywall ceeiling be connected with the Wood ceeiling, or If necessary only at least spots possible and than use Specialised Ankers.
    And than use Specialised Soundproof Boards.
    Like from Knauf 2x Diamond Board 12,5mm or even better silent Board.

  • @tonydif
    @tonydif 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    2 layers of 5/8s overtop of Resilience Channels will not vibrate with sound, it's far too heavy. 2 layers is designed for Fire Rating, not sound dampening.

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That makes senses logically, but the manufacturer has detailed installation instructions and recommends using up to 2 layers of 5/8” drywall. Whether it can vibrate or not with that much weight would depend on the properties of the metal. You might be right, but I didn’t come across anything about it in the instructions.
      5/8” is recommended for sound dampening because of the weight. Mass is the number 1 way to attenuate sound.

  • @kdcustomwoodworking
    @kdcustomwoodworking 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Don't call out the contractor, your the boss on the job say something during not after.
    I think the best to use is SONOpan , lose the metal straps .
    Its a good topic but you will never have true soundproof that a whole different animal . Remerber there no perferfect in construction .

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I had many conversations with the contractor and his crew throughout the job. As I mentioned in the video, they didn’t follow my instructions. As for SONOpan, they actually recommend using it with resilient channels. That product is a whole discussion on its own and I’ll be getting to that in a future video.

    • @kdcustomwoodworking
      @kdcustomwoodworking 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@simonbaxtermusic I just hate seeing the "bad contractor video" I've been in business a long time its hard for small business and lot of times its not black and white .
      I know resilient channels are taught in carpenter schools and it can be a grey area area sound proofing .The panel I used them helped but not soundproof .In all the jobs I've done not one customer asked for soundproofing because of the extra money and very few customers had the knowledge of good sound equipment .So you're a rare breed which is good do your homework lots of good videos out there.
      I respect the fact your fixing and educating yourself you have to being a homeowner also makes it easy when you hire new contractors the'll know what you want.
      Good topic and video

    • @simonbaxtermusic
      @simonbaxtermusic  17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I hear that. I never expected this video to take off and get the attention of contractors. I’m a tiny channel, still learning TH-cam. My drywall contractor was terrible and I was too far into the project by the time I realized just how bad he and his team was. My goal was to share that experience, not take a shot at every contractor. I used an HVAC contractor for the studio and he was amazing. Open, curious, willing to try new things and learn. We figured it out together.

  • @joshhidy
    @joshhidy 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    You’re wasting your time.

    • @RyanMagicAus
      @RyanMagicAus 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      He's still going to hear those footsteps! lol ..

    • @joshhidy
      @joshhidy 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@RyanMagicAus I know!he needs to take the floor upstairs out, decouple the subfloor, then Add 1/2 rubber membrane, then the floor. Maybe that might work

  • @carlosizurieta885
    @carlosizurieta885 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

    @simonbaxtermusic “Don’t trust your contractor with Soundproofing”????. I think the problem here is, you didn’t do your due diligence, and went with probably the cheapest quote and 100% the less of experienced drywall contractor. Just watching you pull down the first layer of drywall, and seeing how the installer went inline with the resilient channel installed of going cross direction with the Res Channel tells me these guys are not experienced with sound reduction. These guys are not contractors, They’re just workers that don’t have the concept of sound reduction.
    What’s the thickness of the Rockwool?
    Have you heard of a product called SONOpan?
    By the way, you went with the most basic method of sound proofing which clearly didn’t help. This is what you usually use in the typical legal dwelling basement.

  • @mookisabatuki4201
    @mookisabatuki4201 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    honestly you just tried to save money, shame on you for posting this.