I am considering a build where the screen effectively "disappears" into the wall - bungeed to EMTs mounted to the middle of the wall stud (see mockup drawings attached.) This would buy me a little more width and height in a 4:3 setup (instead of having to stop a certain distance from drywall for the edge of the enclosure and then losing some more screen real estate within the enclosure.
The walls of my room would be drywalled up until the edge of the stud, where an EMT pipe would be mounted to the center back of the stud with enough room to snake a bungee around. There would be a slight gap between the edge of the 2x4 stud and the screen to avoid the screen bouncing back and rubbing into the stud after impact, so I would need an angled cushion strip where the screen meets the stud to avoid hitting the edge or losing balls behind the screen.
My question is what would be the best material to use along the ceiling and side walls for protection?
I want something that can help with sound dampening but, more importantly (especially for the 4-5' coming off the impact screen) avoids damage to the walls and risk of injury via bounceback from a skyed or shanked shot.
I was planning on drywalling the rest of the room in front of the screen and adding some insulation to the ceiling before the drywall goes in to further help with sound absorption. One thought I had was focusing on sound absorption panels throughout the room and then for the sides (and maybe the ceiling?) adding some sort of netting that would have a little give to "catch" the ball before hitting the sound panels. Perhaps permanent on the ceiling and then on a little sliding track for the sides, so it's out of the way when the simulator is not in use as I'm planning on having the room double as a home theater.
I haven't seen any permanent setups like this, but I'm not sure if that's mostly because you typically wouldn't have a way to affix the impact screen/EMT directly to wall studs and need to create the 'C' shape of an enclosure to support everything. I've seen fold-down or retractable screens and the use of netting or curtains on the side, but those are typically in garages or room setups where a permanent setup isn't an option.
The walls of my room would be drywalled up until the edge of the stud, where an EMT pipe would be mounted to the center back of the stud with enough room to snake a bungee around. There would be a slight gap between the edge of the 2x4 stud and the screen to avoid the screen bouncing back and rubbing into the stud after impact, so I would need an angled cushion strip where the screen meets the stud to avoid hitting the edge or losing balls behind the screen.
My question is what would be the best material to use along the ceiling and side walls for protection?
I want something that can help with sound dampening but, more importantly (especially for the 4-5' coming off the impact screen) avoids damage to the walls and risk of injury via bounceback from a skyed or shanked shot.
I was planning on drywalling the rest of the room in front of the screen and adding some insulation to the ceiling before the drywall goes in to further help with sound absorption. One thought I had was focusing on sound absorption panels throughout the room and then for the sides (and maybe the ceiling?) adding some sort of netting that would have a little give to "catch" the ball before hitting the sound panels. Perhaps permanent on the ceiling and then on a little sliding track for the sides, so it's out of the way when the simulator is not in use as I'm planning on having the room double as a home theater.
I haven't seen any permanent setups like this, but I'm not sure if that's mostly because you typically wouldn't have a way to affix the impact screen/EMT directly to wall studs and need to create the 'C' shape of an enclosure to support everything. I've seen fold-down or retractable screens and the use of netting or curtains on the side, but those are typically in garages or room setups where a permanent setup isn't an option.
Comment