Sound proofing any suggestions


When I listen to my music I want to be sure that know one else is being disturbed, therefore I am in the process of sound proofing my listening room.Any suggestions as to what will keep the sound from going through the wall which is plaster with two layers of sheet rock that I added hoping it would make a difference. Also since I am into health I am avoiding anything that outgasses therefore no foam or smelly materials. One of my first options are fibergalss the one that is less toxic. thanks
pedrillo
Rip out the drywall and insulate in there. Addressing the finished room,after the fact will suck up the sound--necessitating more volume to overcome the treatment. Oh, and don't expect much control in keeping bass from going thrugh the wall/s.
Avguygeorge has the right idea for it to be done right.A lot of work but it looks like you have done alot all ready. Go to owens corning web site they have the right insulation for sound absorbing and try to leave at least a 1" gap of air between wall + insulation (more is better). you could even use some natural fiber sound deading panells as the wall H/D has them (4' - 8') for around $10.Can.$. If you don't want to rip the walls apart, you could put these panells over the existing wall leaving an 1" air gap. although this might deaden the room somewhat depending on your furnture. But much easier to live'n the room a bit afterwards.
We had good luck using a product called SONOboard in soundproofing a friends bassement. It came in 4 x 8 sheets. It was used in the ceiling and walls which were then finished with suspended acoustic tile, and knotty pine tongue-in-groove. Now even when his amplified band practices down there people two floor up can sleep undisturbed.
We've been doing a major renovation on our house for the past year and have had to educate ourselves on similar issues. FWIW here is the consensus I've learned from various sources, as well as our own experience:

Insulation: The best for sound is the blown-in variety. It may also be the least destructive in your case as they only need to access each bay with a single hole unless there are fire-blocks along the run. Second best is the very dense solid insulation made for sound deadening that is very wool-like (not typically available in your local hardware warehouse store and quite expensive as compared to the R30 fiberglass).

A layer of plaster trowled over drywall goes a long way in deadening sound. The combonation of the two is undoubtedly excellent.

Weather seals around all doors will help if you don't mind them indoors. Solid-core doors are excellent while typical panel doors are the worst. One option is to replace the wood panels in the panel doors with tempered glass layered with a sheet of opaque material in between two sheets (like frosted glass but witout the cleaning problems).

Marco
http://www.acoustiblok.com/ This is the stuff to use. But its quite difficult to install. It comes on very large rolls and they weigh a ton. I reccomend professional installation or have 3-4 people on hand. Also its importent to soundproof the doors too.