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Discussion starter · #42 ·
Thanks Owen.

So I decided to try making my own putty pads out of the Duct Seal found in the electrical dept at my local HD. I used gloves, a plastic bag and a cardboard tube I had laying around to flatten out the thick puck that you get. This stuff is sticky! This was a trial and I think next time I'll see if aluminum foil will work better since it stuck to the plastic bag and was hard to seperate. Overall I think it should work out well and they are only $2.48 a piece plus I have $5 off when you spend $50 coupons. So in all I can make 20 for $48 after tax and a little bit of DIY labor.







I also used the foam-in-a-can to make sure my wiring doesn't create unwanted noise within the walls.



I also ran my conduit which comes down from above the soffit framing, along the stair framing and into the "hidden room" below the stairs. I can access the end of the conduit from the hidden room and this will allow me to make a nice, clean finished equipment room. More on this later.



The picture doesn't show the plastic ties I used to fasten the conduit to the framing...

I'm getting about 15 to 20 minutes a night to work on the room and about 2-4 hours on the weekends. My schedule is dictated by my better half.

Her = :foottap:
Me = :crying:
My son = :hissyfit:
 
Now THAT sounds more like the life of someone with kids. LOL. But that's it, you just work stuff in when you can and do it bit by bit. The soffit conduit looks good and I'm sure you'll be happy you did it sometime down the road.

Oh, by the way, nice DIY pads.
 
Discussion starter · #44 ·
What is a good, cheap acoustic sealant that HD carries? I can't find anything that's called "acoustic sealant". Latex? All Purpose? Silicone? Acrylic? Poly? I want to use it around the perimeter of the framing where it meets the concrete and around the perimeters of electrical boxes... I don't want to wait for it to ship or drop the $ on the GG sealant.
 
Discussion starter · #45 · (Edited)
Watching the World Series at 5 feet away from my 60" Sharp AQUOS LCD and I'm very comfortable and enjoying it this large. I moved my recliner to put my eyeballs at 5 feet away from the screen. This is a 16:9 panel so I'm curious how this can translate to a good screen size for my HT. So would it be safe to say that doubling the screen size and viewing distance will produce the same viewing experience? So a 120" diag. 16:9 screen is what I should shoot for? I'm looking to build a 2.35:1 screen and manually mask for 16:9... So I would size it to 120" for 16:9 and let 2.35:1 be more immersive.
 
Discussion starter · #46 ·
And we've started insulation folks!!!



The JM plastic wrapped insulation is within the stair wall and the 23" wide OC paper faced insulation is in the HT wall so that each wall has insulation. It's getting much quieter in the HT now! I got 2-3 hours to work on the room tonight while the kid, the wife and the neighbor watched The Croods upstairs.



Notice the plywood blocking for the rear surround...
 
Discussion starter · #47 ·
Got nothing done this past weekend (other than receiving more stuff) due to everyone in the house being sick but I'm slowly recovering. I plan on getting back downstairs this week and weekend to finish up the wiring and the insulation.

After that it's drywall...

As I approach getting to a "finished" shell I'm thinking more and more about acoustic treatments. It's basically the last piece of the puzzle I haven't figured out or have a full plan for. My thoughts were to line the entire front wall with 2" of mineral wool. Then make "super chunk" corner bass traps using triangles of 4" thick mineral wool stacked in all four corners (24"x24"x~34"). And then place 3"x24"x48" panels at the first reflection points on the walls and ceiling as a starting point and then figure out what to do from there, if anything.

Thoughts?

Premature? Should I wait to do any treatments until I can test the rooms response? Obviously the cheapest solution is best considering my non-existent budget...

Brian!?! :D
 
Discussion starter · #49 ·
I haven't taken any pictures since progress has all but screech to a halt but I've got the front wall and the soffits all drywalled. Well at least hung, not taped or mudded yet. I'm taking some days off from work in January and will spend at least two full days in the HT. Don't give up on me yet HTS!
 
Discussion starter · #51 ·
Woohoo! Just had Christmas at my moms and she got me some Klipsch surrounds! Now all I need is my center and to finish this room! Also got a $100 gift card to HD so that'll help cover the carpet and pad. Goin to work on the room this week since I have about 5 days off from work. All I have left to buy for equipment is a PJ and to make my DIY screen!
 
Discussion starter · #52 ·
Found an RC3 center for sale locally on the Klipsch forum so hopefully I've got all my speakers. I'm still going to save up for the RF62 II to use for a center but this will cover me or the time being.

Going to work on the room tomorrow morning! And I will post pics! :D
 
Found an RC3 center for sale locally on the Klipsch forum so hopefully I've got all my speakers. I'm still going to save up for the RF62 II to use for a center but this will cover me or the time being. Going to work on the room tomorrow morning! And I will post pics! :D
As a owner and fan you may want to look into the RF-64. It's big but very nice I match mine with some RF-63 for L/R only because I thought RF-83's would be to big and heavy for me to move with out having help. Nice work so far:).
 
Discussion starter · #55 ·
My kid got strep throat this week so once again the build all but screeched to a halt. I managed to hang a few more sheets of drywall and got the rest of the basement cleaned up so now I can focus on the HT exclusively when I go down there to work. I also picked up my entry door which is a solid core 2 panel style to match the rest of the doors in the house.

Some of my electrical boxes aren't sticking out far enough into their holes in the drywall. Is there a way to fix that so that the outlets line up nicely with the cover plates?
 
My kid got strep throat this week so once again the build all but screeched to a halt. I managed to hang a few more sheets of drywall and got the rest of the basement cleaned up so now I can focus on the HT exclusively when I go down there to work. I also picked up my entry door which is a solid core 2 panel style to match the rest of the doors in the house.

Some of my electrical boxes aren't sticking out far enough into their holes in the drywall. Is there a way to fix that so that the outlets line up nicely with the cover plates?
Personally I just use longer screws. A lot of people use extension rings like this though.
 
Discussion starter · #58 ·
Went downstairs yesterday to find an inch of standing water in the basement! THANKFULLY we didn't lose anything since all the stuff in storage is in plastic totes. The HT materials are all okay since I had the small stuff in boxes on a bench and the I've dried out the lumber that was laid down. Running a dehumidifier for a few days to dry out the rest. Found out the drainage systems outlet pipe that supposed to be exposed to daylight had backed up due to ice build up. With this years winter in Maine we've had snow, freezing rain and then unseasonably warm temps which caused a deep melt and high surface water table. All of this compounded to a clogged pipe and all the runoff went above and below my slab!
 
Went downstairs yesterday to find an inch of standing water in the basement! THANKFULLY we didn't lose anything since all the stuff in storage is in plastic totes. The HT materials are all okay since I had the small stuff in boxes on a bench and the I've dried out the lumber that was laid down. Running a dehumidifier for a few days to dry out the rest. Found out the drainage systems outlet pipe that supposed to be exposed to daylight had backed up due to ice build up. With this years winter in Maine we've had snow, freezing rain and then unseasonably warm temps which caused a deep melt and high surface water table. All of this compounded to a clogged pipe and all the runoff went above and below my slab!
Ugh - sorry to hear that mate. Glad though there was no real permanent damage - this really has been a crazy winter to this point...
 
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