Great video. Any tips for wrapping the fabric around the actual light to maintain a good tightness? Could you cut a matching hole in the fabric first and then insert the light Philips light fixture? And do these particular LED lights get hot enough to be a concern around fabric?
Great idea! Yes, getting the fabric tight around the hole would be wise to make a clean install. You could staple the fabric on the backside of the hole onto the peg board or ply. LEDs emit almost no heat compared to incandescent bulbs.
I have an hvac for the rest of my house, separate from the room above me. We have renters above and I did insulation in the ceiling, but nothing else super special. What could I do without redoing the ceiling and what not that would seal up the room better and not let out my sound, and also help mitigate their footsteps? Would foam inside the room help?!?
Cool vid. Isn't the 'actual' width of insulation that's meant to go inside 24" stud bays really 22.5" since the studs would be built at 24" on-center? This may be why your insulation is needing to be held up by those additional 1x1s. I'm not positive, so maybe acoustic insulation has different actual dimensions, for some strange reason? Something worth looking into/considering.
FREE Acoustic Treatment Guide: www.soundproofyourstudio.com/acoustic
Thanks! Best/Mathias
Great video. Any tips for wrapping the fabric around the actual light to maintain a good tightness? Could you cut a matching hole in the fabric first and then insert the light Philips light fixture? And do these particular LED lights get hot enough to be a concern around fabric?
I was wondering about how to get the fabric to look clean and tight around the light as well.
Great idea! Yes, getting the fabric tight around the hole would be wise to make a clean install. You could staple the fabric on the backside of the hole onto the peg board or ply. LEDs emit almost no heat compared to incandescent bulbs.
@@DadRockAndGuitarssame. We need a follow up vid.
I have an hvac for the rest of my house, separate from the room above me. We have renters above and I did insulation in the ceiling, but nothing else super special. What could I do without redoing the ceiling and what not that would seal up the room better and not let out my sound, and also help mitigate their footsteps? Would foam inside the room help?!?
Cool vid. Isn't the 'actual' width of insulation that's meant to go inside 24" stud bays really 22.5" since the studs would be built at 24" on-center? This may be why your insulation is needing to be held up by those additional 1x1s. I'm not positive, so maybe acoustic insulation has different actual dimensions, for some strange reason? Something worth looking into/considering.