QUOTE(kenlimfornication @ May 14 2015, 03:22 PM)
Thanks buddy! Helps a lot. Now I will hunt for 70w and 50w bass and guitar amps, and also find ways to treat the room acoustically. Right now I think it is not good.
You're always welcome. My first step was rearranging everything in the room, adding furniture, shelves, stuff etc. and making sure it sounded okay.
Also, you could try converting your full size drumset into a jungle kit - the floor tom can be converted into a kick drum; this would a project in itself:
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1...=1&l=a8036ee768 Anyway, once the drums are smaller, everything else becomes easier. I used a large 2.4m x 1.2m wooden pallet as a riser for my jungle kit. Below the pallet/riser (where it contacts the floor), I used large rubber floor mats. And on the pallet/riser, I use a carpet which the drums are on.
As for my guitar amps (on the 1W setting), I've never had to turn up past 12 o'clock - it becomes way too loud otherwise. Even my old solid state 15W Fender Frontman amp is sufficiently loud enough, though it hisses, crackles and buzzes with gain turned up, so I don't use it (this is another story altogether).
QUOTE(ciwi1166 @ May 14 2015, 04:18 PM)
how u keep the noise down so outside peoples can't hear it?

You turn down the volume to manageable levels.
Assuming that you've sealed off the room, so the sound doesn't "leak". By sealing off gaps under and around the door(s), and doing the same for the windows, you're basically tackling the "sound isolation" issue. Read:
https://www.soundonsound.com/sos/mar98/arti...ndproofing.htmlFrankly, the only real problem would be bass frequencies which travel along concrete beams/pillars. Turning down the volume usually fixes everything.