setting up a listening room in unfinished basement


anybody do this , if so how did you go about doing it?
as far as wall treatments and equipment placements..

how was the sound?
eantala
You situation is similar to mine. This should be helpful http://www.rivesaudio.com! Some of the best money spent goes into the room, not on the rack.
I did what you are thinking. Do not waste your $ on fancy sound panels. I used old rugs (on the floor, walls and ceiling. You can also find on the net sources for foam sound panels for little money. I think I paid $80 plus shipping for (4) 4ftx4ft panels. BTW they work well. It may not look great but the sound was very nice. Experiement with overstuffed furniture also.
Good luck
Bozo's suggestions might make a room overdamped, especially if you have low ceilings.

Also, you might not need much help eliminating bounce on the walls if the finish is rough enough.

I have Maggie 3.6's in my basement. I bought acoustical foam for about 1/3 of the ceiling, and I covered the rest with sheets of fake tongue-and-groove. The floor is covered with a thin hard rug, and there is a second oriental carpet in between the speakers and my listening area.

Walk around the room and clap your hands together sharply. You should hear some resonance. If it's totally dead (no reverb at all) you've overdamped. If it "pings" you need some damping.

Too much bass is an easy problem to fix. Take a sheet or two of the acoustical foam and roll it up into a column and place it in the corners.

Your mids will be a function of speaker placement.

The biggest problem you may face is figuring out ceiling reflection if you are using dynamic drivers. They radiate in a circular shape and a low ceiling sends a lot of energy to the ceiling, down to the floor and back. Dampen with foam just behind the halfway point between the speakers and your listening area. If that's still too bright, move the foam to the midpoint. If it's too dead, move the foam closer to the speaker.

All in all, I spent a few hundred bucks on materials and have a very nice room in my 7' basement.

Good luck
Rives Audio, F. Alton Everest and Jon Risch's DIY acoustic treatments ought to get you started with good info.

Be careful when trying to build / treat a room. It is possible to use materials that are non-linear across the frequency range. As such, it is possible to create more problems than what you started off with. This could be due to introducing materials that absorb / damp some specific frequencies while increasing reflections in other frequency ranges, etc... While "non-linear absorption" CAN be a "good thing" if properly applied, even some "audiophile approved" products do this without making you aware of it. Spend the money on at least one of Everest's books and read / learn what you can on the web and you'll end up dollars and hours ahead in the long run. Sean
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