Mononoaware
Active member
Have you made these, and if so, what was your experience? We bought a new home, and my new office could use a few to reduce reflections.
One of the big things is that to be most effective, the sound absorber needs to be as close as possible to the listener or the sound source. The closer you get to a middle distance the less effective.
I should clarify that the further the deadener is from either the source or the listener, the larger surface area it has to have to be effective. In practice it is better to deaden closer to the source.
Smooth hard surfaces produce reflections
this is why we call popcorn ceiling acoustic ceilings
If you could just get some cheap foam from the hardware
Put it over the walls
Paint it
If 1/4 inch wasn't so flimsy that would work
You don't have to cover the wall
Just break up the flat existing surface
NegativeEase would have a better idea of how to handle sound treatment for a small room. He's contributed to designing and building professional studios, and has a ton of experience working in them.
The thing to note about absorption is in order to absorb a wave, the thickness of the absorber has to be at least 1/4 the length of the wave. So notice that to absorb or trap bass waves down to 80hz theoretically it would need to be about 15 feet thick!
![]()
You might be better off with some diffusion/absorbers like these.
https://www.gikacoustics.com/product/slatfusor-pl-poly-cylindrical-wood-slat-diffuser/
I made absorbers with cheap frame wood and R19 insulation. Very effective, but they do stick out about 2-4" from the wall. Actually I did a mix of absorbers and diffusers. I alternated so the diffusers kick the sound into the absorbers. A cheap effective diffusor is just using cheap 1/2" wood for a frame and tacking a panel of Masonite such that it bows in a shallow curve. There is a calculation of arc that determines what frequency it will diffuse down to (mine only diffused down to 125hz I think, I should have made them shallower). The greater the arc the lower the frequency it will diffuse, which is good because then it can sit closer to the wall and not stick out so much. I should have done mine floor to ceiling. The way I did it, there was still too much energy reflecting around the ceiling and floor areas.
![]()