I am completely redoing my studio room and a huge part of this will be applying proper room treatment to the best of my ability.
My daughter had to re do all her flooring and I ended up with a lot of the original material. The face side is hard and mostly looked like hell but when I flipped it over the back is in perfect shape and it is soft cork. So I have used this.
My room is in the basement and was unfinished. The ceiling was floor joists and I had stuffed 3.5" of rockwool in the cavities. So I have now covered that with the cork flooring as well as my face wall and part of the side walls. ( see photo ) So the room will now need to be analyzed before I start adding treatment.
I started looking into "How to measure a rooms acoustic properties" and so far I'm told to purchase $1,000 worth of mikes and software! not going to happen.
My wife is keeping a sharp eye on the budget for this! ( as example she saw the purchase for Studio One!) I'm expected to do this on the cheap.
There is a free Room Measurement software called REW- https://www.roomeqwizard.com/
But then they also talk about purchasing a mike that comes with a profile that you have to first feed into REW.
So here is the big question. Can a person get "close enough" room measurements just using a good flat response condenser mike and a few plug ins?
I was thinking I could simply send a pink/ white? noise out of my NS 10 M's and move a condenser mike around the room. I have a Shure condenser that has a very close to flat response down to 100hz.
That could feed into something like Span or Melda M analyzer.
I don't want a dead room. Right now it has a typical small empty room echo. My goal is a nice live room for acoustic guitar and vocals. the room is 11x14 with a 7'2" ceiling.
My daughter had to re do all her flooring and I ended up with a lot of the original material. The face side is hard and mostly looked like hell but when I flipped it over the back is in perfect shape and it is soft cork. So I have used this.
My room is in the basement and was unfinished. The ceiling was floor joists and I had stuffed 3.5" of rockwool in the cavities. So I have now covered that with the cork flooring as well as my face wall and part of the side walls. ( see photo ) So the room will now need to be analyzed before I start adding treatment.
I started looking into "How to measure a rooms acoustic properties" and so far I'm told to purchase $1,000 worth of mikes and software! not going to happen.
My wife is keeping a sharp eye on the budget for this! ( as example she saw the purchase for Studio One!) I'm expected to do this on the cheap.
There is a free Room Measurement software called REW- https://www.roomeqwizard.com/
But then they also talk about purchasing a mike that comes with a profile that you have to first feed into REW.
So here is the big question. Can a person get "close enough" room measurements just using a good flat response condenser mike and a few plug ins?
I was thinking I could simply send a pink/ white? noise out of my NS 10 M's and move a condenser mike around the room. I have a Shure condenser that has a very close to flat response down to 100hz.
That could feed into something like Span or Melda M analyzer.
I don't want a dead room. Right now it has a typical small empty room echo. My goal is a nice live room for acoustic guitar and vocals. the room is 11x14 with a 7'2" ceiling.