DJ Booth Inside a Subwoofer

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DJ Booth Inside a Subwoofer
Posted on: 29.08.2012 by Penny Declerk
ok well its not really inside of a subwoofer.

I recently got a gig at a new club opening in my town. This lounge/club has been completely stripped and remodeled. It looks pretty sweet on the inside now. They did a complete upgrade to the sound and light systems and its gunna be sick in there once it opens up. It has a decent sized dancefloor for the area and then plenty of lounge areas for people to sit and talk or dance once the evening heats up.

The one problem for me is that the new layout didnt leave much room for a DJ Booth. The "booth" is off to the side of the dancefloor built into the wooden railing for the dancefloor. Also built into this space is one of the two subwoofers for the dancefloor. Sorry I dont have a picture but just visualize a JBL Dual 18" sub with a larger wooden enclosure around it to set it back into the wall and to hide it from view. This leaves me with decent tabletop space for my cdj/mixer/laptop. But im worried about the vibration from basically being on top of the subwoofer.

So my question is, what should I do to protect my stuff from all the vibration? Do I use foam, rubber, ect to lift it up... I would like to bring the turntables eventually but these would be more affected by the vibrations than cdj's.
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by Jack Bastard
It works ok Here's a vinyl set recorded on it
believe you missed my subtle witt there, lol. nice mix though, now following your soundcloud
Lela Umanskaya
29.08.2012
Originally Posted by deevey
Its ridiculous that when a club is re-designed they dont actually ask a working DJ about the DJ box and its layout ... bet your life they'd ask a chef how to layout a kitchen.
You've obviously never worked in a club kitchen

To the OP. All the above suggestions are pretty well spot on. You can even do multiple layers if the vibration is excessive, but obviously you don't want the decks 5 feet off of the floor.
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by Jack Bastard
We regularly play on a table made of Funktion 1 bassbins, like someone said above, mass is the key. We have a big slab of concrete that we put on top.
guessing that holds the needles down pretty solidly
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by MyUsername
Did someone say beer coasters ? (or whatever it's called in English)


beer mats
Matt Kane
29.08.2012
you have to bring your own tt/cdj
Penny Declerk
29.08.2012
ok well its not really inside of a subwoofer.

I recently got a gig at a new club opening in my town. This lounge/club has been completely stripped and remodeled. It looks pretty sweet on the inside now. They did a complete upgrade to the sound and light systems and its gunna be sick in there once it opens up. It has a decent sized dancefloor for the area and then plenty of lounge areas for people to sit and talk or dance once the evening heats up.

The one problem for me is that the new layout didnt leave much room for a DJ Booth. The "booth" is off to the side of the dancefloor built into the wooden railing for the dancefloor. Also built into this space is one of the two subwoofers for the dancefloor. Sorry I dont have a picture but just visualize a JBL Dual 18" sub with a larger wooden enclosure around it to set it back into the wall and to hide it from view. This leaves me with decent tabletop space for my cdj/mixer/laptop. But im worried about the vibration from basically being on top of the subwoofer.

So my question is, what should I do to protect my stuff from all the vibration? Do I use foam, rubber, ect to lift it up... I would like to bring the turntables eventually but these would be more affected by the vibrations than cdj's.
Teresia Janusch
30.08.2012
concrete slabs is the way to go...sounds like an after thought by the designer...surely the sound guys would know it causes issues.
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by Jack Bastard
It works ok Here's a vinyl set recorded on it
believe you missed my subtle witt there, lol. nice mix though, now following your soundcloud
Lela Umanskaya
29.08.2012
Originally Posted by deevey
Its ridiculous that when a club is re-designed they dont actually ask a working DJ about the DJ box and its layout ... bet your life they'd ask a chef how to layout a kitchen.
You've obviously never worked in a club kitchen

To the OP. All the above suggestions are pretty well spot on. You can even do multiple layers if the vibration is excessive, but obviously you don't want the decks 5 feet off of the floor.
Rolanda Clodfelder
29.08.2012
What you want is mass, combined with measures to uncouple your gear from the desk.
3/4 MDF board with large screws protruding about 1' out the other side spikes down onto the table - this minimizes the area that can be effected by rumble and MDF absorbs sound. On top about 2' of Rockwool and on top of that Concrete patio slabs to mount your decks on. That should do the trick nicely for just about any sound system.

If its for turntables take them out of the Flightcases. Technics/Vestax etc have isolation material built into the feet, if the deck touches the side of a flightcase whatsoever you will most probably increase any rumble through the body and the possibility of feedback.

Its ridiculous that when a club is re-designed they dont actually ask a working DJ about the DJ box and its layout ... bet your life they'd ask a chef how to layout a kitchen.

30.08.2012
It works ok Here's a vinyl set recorded on it -

http://soundcloud.com/magichatstand/...and-live-quirk

The one jump is an over-excited punter banging into one of the stacks, and if you listen to the end you can hear the crowd cheering through the needles
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by Jack Bastard
We regularly play on a table made of Funktion 1 bassbins, like someone said above, mass is the key. We have a big slab of concrete that we put on top.
guessing that holds the needles down pretty solidly
Dorcas Bassignani
30.08.2012
Originally Posted by MyUsername
Did someone say beer coasters ? (or whatever it's called in English)


beer mats

30.08.2012
We regularly play on a table made of Funktion 1 bassbins, like someone said above, mass is the key. We have a big slab of concrete that we put on top.
Nereida Jasnoch
29.08.2012
isolation pads.

Did someone say beer coasters ? (or whatever it's called in English)

5 or so under each ttfoot and not even the heaviest of bassweights can affect the stylus. But OP has cdjs, so he 's even safer.
Dione Haimes
29.08.2012
As already said, CDJs should be fine, especially if its just 3/4 hours once a week, not gona cause any major damage, plus its inside a padded coffin so youlll be fine, if in doubt, foam pads, bricks, bubble wrap, anything between your coffin and the table should dampen anything.

club i worked in a year ago had a mixer and TTs, and it was a solid wax evening , no timecodes. i now value pennies VERY much for keeping the needle down.
Nikole Resende
29.08.2012
Foam won't help you against vibrations...

What you want is mass, combined with measures to uncouple your gear from the desk.

The best solution would be a concrete slab resting on some squash-balls. This may not be a viable solution if you have to bring it to every gig, but if you could talk to the club and/or other DJs to have something like that permanently installed this definetely would work.
Tesha Freudenstein
29.08.2012
CDJs should be safe. i DJed with mine being literally a few centimeters away from a club-level sub without them having any problem whatsoever. if you are still concerned you can always put some sort of foam under your setup to prevent vibrations.

Ciara Cuttill
29.08.2012
from what you're explaining sounds like you would need to put some isolation pads under the coffin ... although i believe it's going to be terrible once you start manipulating vinyl. good luck bro
Penny Declerk
29.08.2012
this is a small college town club that is just starting out. for now each dj will have to bring his own setup. i will have 2 cdj's/mixer in a coffin and then my laptop on a crane stand.
Matt Kane
29.08.2012
you have to bring your own tt/cdj

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