Rate & Level Of Absorption - www.AcousticFields.com - YouTube

Channel: Acoustic Fields

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Hi everyone, Dennis Foley from Acoustic Fields, today we’re going to talk about rate and
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level of absorption.
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I get a lot of calls from customers and they’re – most people are under the impression that
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all sound absorption materials are the same.
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Well, nothing could be further from the truth.
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Not only are they different, their rates and levels are different.
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But the sound quality that they impart upon your room is different.
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So you have to be very very careful.
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One size does not fit all.
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Definitely one size does not fit all when you’re talking about surface areas within
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a room.So there’s a little definition here.
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Rate, it’s the rate of absorption.
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How much and what frequencies.
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That’s what you want to know.
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At 200 cycles how much energy is this particular material is absorbing, okay?
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It’s called absorption coefficient.
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Level.
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What is the top and the bottom range of the frequency response of the material you’re
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considering?
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What is the lowest frequency it absorbs at and how much?
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What is the highest frequency it absorbs at and how much?
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So you want to know the bottom and the top frequencies of absorption.
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You also want to look at the rate between those two.
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So you have the bottom and you have the top.
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But you want to look at the rate of absorption.
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Does it get there quick?
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Does it do it smoothly?
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Is there a lot of peaks and troughs in the curve?
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You have to look at both things.
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What rate and level, where in the room?
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It all depends on usage.
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A live room is going to be way different than a voice room, a vocal room.
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A control room is going to be different than a home theater or a listening room.
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So usage is very critical.
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You have to be careful where you put things.
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What rates and levels they absorb at and what the usage of the room is.
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I see a lot of this Roxul 703 stuff out there.
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I don’t know how this got started, I just I can’t believe it’s so common in the
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literature.
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I know it’s cheap, I know it’s readily available but be very very careful about where
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you use this stuff.
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It does have applicability on the lower frequencies.
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But you’ve got to be careful with the middle and highs with it.
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It has a timber coloration that’s not good for mids and highs.
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We don’t use any of it in our builds.
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So be very very careful with it.
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Where do you put what rate and level of absorption?
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Once again it depends on usage.
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Let’s take two channel listings because that’s a common one people are always concerned
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about.
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The side walls are different than the rear and the front walls.
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So you want some different rates and levels of absorption on both.
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Also depends on the dimensions of the room, the size of the speakers, what volume levels
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you play at, so all of this has to be taken into consideration.
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We’re doing some testing now with different rates and levels of absorption on side walls
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and we’re finding that the front part of the room on the side wall is different than
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the rear and the middle is obviously the most critical because that’s the area that we’re
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involved with with out sound triangle.
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So you have to be very very careful about rates and levels.
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Definitely one size does not fit all.
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You can see in graphic five here.
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Here is a graphic of our foam compared to two of the other popular manufacturers.
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And those curves are those curves for a reason.
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And we’ll talk about that in another video.