spitzer
New member
Hi
This is one really old debate to me, with an old friend. It's about a garage door and the question is about sound going out.
Which is the better choice: a) one REALLY thick layer (50 cm) of particleboard, or b) at least two layers, separated by an air gap or gaps?
I would even tend to think the isolation wall could be made to be thinner in total for the same reduction by using the air gap variant (not to mention the wall in question is the only way to get air in/out so you need to drill).
But I really simply don't know. Which one blocks the most dB?
EDIT: I guess I typed the "quick" question too quickly. What I'm referring to here is a LARGE door, so in effect it's an isolation WALL anyway. The basic question is still this. Which one: a) ONE thick, REALLY thick, isolation layer or b) two or more thinner layers.
This is one really old debate to me, with an old friend. It's about a garage door and the question is about sound going out.
Which is the better choice: a) one REALLY thick layer (50 cm) of particleboard, or b) at least two layers, separated by an air gap or gaps?
I would even tend to think the isolation wall could be made to be thinner in total for the same reduction by using the air gap variant (not to mention the wall in question is the only way to get air in/out so you need to drill).
But I really simply don't know. Which one blocks the most dB?
EDIT: I guess I typed the "quick" question too quickly. What I'm referring to here is a LARGE door, so in effect it's an isolation WALL anyway. The basic question is still this. Which one: a) ONE thick, REALLY thick, isolation layer or b) two or more thinner layers.
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I've done more measuring at my own place, which is a pretty typical garage -- luckily built with brick walls. Up close, an acoustic kick drum will give you over 125 dB SPL in the face and most of that is under 250 Hz. The brick wall does a pretty good job, but still 80-90 dB come through. The higher frequencies... not that much. Around 65 dB or less if there's no bass. Which I guess is what you'd expect, a brick wall probably also weighs a literal ton. What I'd like to do there would be to somehow "map" how the kick drum projects the sound since it's not really consistent or intuitive (putting something heavy directly in front of the drum doesn't help, neither does putting something heavy inside the drum and it's as loud 90 degrees to the right as it is to the back. Being able to literally trap even 5 dB of that sound would be awesome (improving the room acoustics would probably also help, at least on a "placebo" level).