🎶 Elevate Your Voice, Anytime, Anywhere!
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D**
Perfect Booth for Apartment
I'm so pleased with this purchase. Easy setup...very strong and stable. And the weighted blanket is so high quality. The sound waves don't bounce around inside this booth and it's amazing value for the price. Get one for your home studio
S**A
Great idea! Not great execution...
This is brilliant, easy, cheap and unfortunately executed by persons with zero idea.The directions indicate that you are too put the frame while still folded, inside the custom-sewn moving blanket enclosure. Which by the way is amazing, very nicely stitched, and very strong. If you follow directions everything goes pretty well, 1 small issue,1 large issue. There is no way to hold the flaps open, there's no buttons, there's no straps, nothing, when you go in you are in complete darkness. (Which is nice, except for when you're trying to assemble) But you know. you get it done. That's the small issue. Then you look at the directions again and they give you four bars, these bars come with screws and nuts. This is the large issue: You are meant to install these between the bottom four feet to stabilize the enclosure. We've put the frame inside the enclosure, opened it and raised it up filling the enclosure. Now you have to put in the bars, No problem right?Well, the nuts go on the bottom of the feet, The feet that now have the entire metal frame above them and are holding up a 50 lb blanket to boot. The directions make it look easy, they just show to lift the side of the enclosure and you know put in the screw and the nut. Which is really easy to do in a drawing but really hard to do when the sides of your enclosure are sewn to the bottom of it!If you need it, buy it, it's worth it. Just be prepared to do a little intelligent engineering once you receive it. Couple of snaps at the bottom of each flap, (That's the plan, it's not complete) and in my case; I purchased 3 - 30" x 1" aluminum flat bars. I drilled holes in the legs and tapped them, installed 3x 1.5" pieces of all thread, using red loctite and a shallow nut to lock it in place. (I don't own a welder) I drilled holes in each end of the flat bars, then bolted them to the legs with wingnuts (to keep it portable) about 28" up from the bottom.NOTE: if you are a small or not very strong person you will need help to do this. That said even with a run to Ace hardware, and all the other work that I did including figuring out how to do what I did. It was standing and functional within 90 minutes of the time it arrived at my door. Had the kit come designed the way that I made it, It would have taken probably 20 minutes to assemble.
M**N
Super Easy Setup!
Setting up this booth was a breeze! It unfolds in seconds, and I love how lightweight it is. Perfect for my home studio and easy to take on the road for gigs. Great investment for podcasters!
P**N
Showed up moldy
Showed up all moldy dirty and wet
A**
Cheap, somewhat functional
In terms of looks, it’s 100% not as symmetrical and comforting as the thumbnails act as. Setting it up is rather difficult but not impossible, though I’d recommend not trying to screw the bottom layers as it’s incredibly difficult and not worth the extra layering. It’s decently cheap for a booth although not as valuable or worthwhile, it’ll work to kill most room tones but won’t completely shut off reverbs from your voice and whatnot. The size is decent for people in the 5’5-6’0” range, maybe slightly smaller.TL;DR, it works as a cheap alternative if you don’t want to deal with actual sound panels and researching stuff like that, but I highly recommend doing so or spending more for a thicker booth (or even a PVC DIY one for less with moving blankets). But, if you wanna pay cheaply for less functionality, it does its job decently enough.(Also it doesn’t come with a mic stand or lighting, it comes with some phone/tablet holders which are pretty flimsy but work if you try enough)
T**R
Do not waste your money!
The media could not be loaded. Where do I even begin?Portable: Hardly. Sure compared to a framed in and drywalled room. But if you've gotta hit the road with this thing, or ever just tare it down and set it up elsewhere quickly, forget it. Weighs a lot, and I was hoping that was a good sign. It wasn't.Assembly: a nightmare. Something so simple and the included, single page, torn directions. Were not even very useful. Nevermind the fact steps 2 and 3 are the exact same thing. The real problem comes when attaching the bottom, super thin metal bars. The included hardware is far too long. If installed the proper direction, you will have bolts stabbing out the bottom into the floor. If you install them upside down like I did, to prevnt my hardwood floors from being murdered. Well then you have 8, jagged, long bolts sticking up in each corner. The metal and hardware quality is so bad, you will absolutely get tin like sounds. Also you have to fight with the legs up and down, multiple times, to allow yourself clearance to get the bottom hardware secure and tight. Also the included tools, useless. The phillips screw driver is too small for the phillips head bolts. And the "wrench" is a paper thin stamped metal piece, that doesn't really fit in the spaces. I had to use a 1/4" socket wrench, 8mm socket, and a real phillips driver. Of course this caused the super thin metal to start crushing. It's either that, or have loose metal, in a sound booth... Took me over an hour to fight with this thing and figure out how to make it better than the instructions.The presentation: poor, just look at the pics I posted.The most important part, sound reduction:None? If that's possible. You can hear everything around you as if no walls were there. On the outside, same deal. No noise reduction. And absolutely does not cut down on echo.This is ultimately an expemsive, hot, complicated, blanket fort. With less acoustic benefit.
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