I've been doing a little bit of research...
In my previous home I didn't need a recording booth, the sound was very good in the room, foam on the main wall made it.... But I just moved into a new apartment in the city... The sound is horrible. I can not do a good take of my voice, like the wave of the voice is being lost before the mic catches it, which pushes me to increase the input volume and even change the Eq I was used to like. Plus, I can hear the neighbor next door's answering machine and the boom bass from downstairs... I'm renting so it's not like I want to do some major work on the walls or anything.
I was just reading about vocal booth. All made ones are 5 grands eeeek!!!
(look: http://www.whisperroom.com/prieap.html#price )
We have a Whisper Room in our A/V department. They don't give you complete isolation. Probably better than nothing though. I think a smaller room like ours wasn't that much(around$1500 if I remember correctly.). You might be able to build your own but remember to factor in ventilation and lighting. The cool thing about Whisper Rooms is that they can be disassembled without too much effort. They are very heavy though.
Those portabooths look kinda hokie. They might work for your needs but they won't eliminate your background noise of course.
_________________ Ian Faith: "Certainly, in the topsy-turvy world of heavy rock, having a good solid piece of wood in your hand is often useful."
I have a 4' x 6' WhisperRoom and I love it. I have a standard model that knocks down noise coming in or out by about 50%. Now I can't hear my neighbors, and they can't hear me. I paid just over $4K for mine including shipping. It was a breeze to put together and I will take it with me when I move out of my apartment.
I just posted this (vocal baffle) on the Acoustics discussion. I know some will laugh at this but when you consider how simple, cheap and stable this is you may want to try it. Much in-room leakage comes from drives, amps and reflections as well as the open back end of the mic picking up the same. I'm sure every one has a couple extra boom stands around and inexpensive futons, the lightweight, three panel type, are pretty easy to find.
If the futon is the standard cloth with zipper ends, simply insert the booms (90 degree angle) in the zipper ends and raise to preferred level. On the ground, they're perfect for acoustic guitar and amps and the stands are the perfect height. Raised all the way it makes a nice L-shaped baffle for vocals. Add another futon and a couple inexpensive stands and you've got a complete rectangle enclosure.
Storage is simple because you just remove the futons, fold them up and the stands remain the same. It really tightens up the mic area and cuts down on leakage. It won't be a whisper room but it won't break the bank either. Hope this helps.
The only "soundproof room" I ever worked was within 100 feet of a subway train.
The room was a room built within a room filled on all sides with sand. The interior room "floated" on hard rubber strips about 3 or 4 inches thick. It had to cost the studio owners a ton $$$ to build, but it really did the job of isolating the sound of the train.
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