Very good timing! I live close to an airport and suffer from airborn noise. I started a big insulation project (thermal & acoustic) and apply all your tips. This one was 'haunting' me. The rooms are so well isolated that they need ventilation but I didn't know how to tackle that. Now I will make some sound mazes! Thanks for the great tip! Would you 'decouple' the soundmaze from the ceiling structure aswell?
Great video. Any idea how to build a noise maze for a window? Solving the problem of getting fresh (cool) air into a bedroom in a city appartment while muffeling occasional noise from a mostly quiet street. Are there any commercial products for this?
What should I do if I want to soundproof over a hardwood floor that’s already made? Can you put mass loaded vinyl directly on the floor? or gym floor mat? Some foam on the floor first, then the MLV, and then a gym floor rubber mat?
You could build a little frame and just float it on top so you don’t have to ruin your floor, put a rubber strip between the floor and frame to limit vibration and insulate inbetween the frame with acoustic insulation
Hi! am from India.Recently constructed a recording home studio with MDF panels fully with multiple groovings on it. A month has been passed away still strong emissions of formaldehyde is offgasing. No ventilation in the room, but trying to keep the doors open, room cooking, turning on portable tower fans.Yet, no result.Kindly help me out. Thanks in advance!
Do you have any ideas on how to open truck window 1 cm in my suburban to get ventilation while camping in it in the backcountry? I'd like to get the ventilation but also somehow keep out the noise of the 30,000 ft commercial air traffic.
Commercial Recording Studios use 2' of solid concrete to 'muffle' the noise of jets at high altitudes. It is the most difficult noise to eliminate. Yeah, in a truck, that will be tough.
@@enchantederic3792 2 feet of solid concrete to muffle commercial aircraft at 30,000 ft? That doesn't make sense. Sounds like massive overkill. Where did you read this?
Hello! Are you answering questions, can you help me with this? I am making a plywood enclosure for a computer - result would be basically a wide rectangular tube with back and front open for ventilation, would usage of accoustic foam and thin (0.5-1CM) layer for dampening work to make this thing reasonably quite(r)? Long story short: It's a flat rectangular box with sides open on the prolonged segments, inside that box is a noise emitting device, would foam help reduce noise enough, like around 20% or more? Thanks! Hope some help will be heard!
I find your videos very informative, thank you! I have a question concerning Noise absorption. My cable box & TV give out high frequency. I'm not concerned with outside noises, or keeping noise inside the room, just absorbing this annoying noise! lol.. I have considered ceiling curtains, Wall curtains, and covering my wood headboard in thick fabric. Will any, or all of this work?? Please help.
Half the videos of you rambling about what we are thinking already we searched your video to find out how to build this item. we already thought of all the things that you rambled on about for half the dang video
I’m sound proofing my ceiling and it has a depth of 16 inches should I put a bunch of layers of sound proofing insulation or should I leave an air void? I’m also installing a resilient Chanel. Thank you for the help. I’m trying to soundproof a down stairs apartment and I’m watching your videos to get it done, I just don’t know if I should add a bunch of layers of sound proof insulation or leave a gap making an air void
Very good timing! I live close to an airport and suffer from airborn noise. I started a big insulation project (thermal & acoustic) and apply all your tips. This one was 'haunting' me. The rooms are so well isolated that they need ventilation but I didn't know how to tackle that. Now I will make some sound mazes! Thanks for the great tip!
Would you 'decouple' the soundmaze from the ceiling structure aswell?
Thanks! I wouldn’t Worry about decoupling the sound maze.
Great video. Any idea how to build a noise maze for a window? Solving the problem of getting fresh (cool) air into a bedroom in a city appartment while muffeling occasional noise from a mostly quiet street. Are there any commercial products for this?
Great video, looking forward to see some basic builds and tests, that would be awesome!
Do you have to make 2 sound mazes? One for air in and 1 for the air out? Is this passive or do I always need the fan?
What should I do if I want to soundproof over a hardwood floor that’s already made? Can you put mass loaded vinyl directly on the floor? or gym floor mat? Some foam on the floor first, then the MLV, and then a gym floor rubber mat?
You could build a little frame and just float it on top so you don’t have to ruin your floor, put a rubber strip between the floor and frame to limit vibration and insulate inbetween the frame with acoustic insulation
Hi! am from India.Recently constructed a recording home studio with MDF panels fully with multiple groovings on it. A month has been passed away still strong emissions of formaldehyde is offgasing. No ventilation in the room, but trying to keep the doors open, room cooking, turning on portable tower fans.Yet, no result.Kindly help me out. Thanks in advance!
Keep changing the air in the room also buy a air purifier with a carbon filter in. Eg a winix
Would split system air conditioning work?
Do you have any ideas on how to open truck window 1 cm in my suburban to get ventilation while camping in it in the backcountry? I'd like to get the ventilation but also somehow keep out the noise of the 30,000 ft commercial air traffic.
Commercial Recording Studios use 2' of solid concrete to 'muffle' the noise of jets at high altitudes. It is the most difficult noise to eliminate. Yeah, in a truck, that will be tough.
@@enchantederic3792 2 feet of solid concrete to muffle commercial aircraft at 30,000 ft? That doesn't make sense. Sounds like massive overkill. Where did you read this?
Ty for good video i true the ideas👍
I have a enclosure for my 3D printer it's all sound proofed but it gets to warm I want a fan that sucks out hot air but keeps in the sound
Hello! Are you answering questions, can you help me with this? I am making a plywood enclosure for a computer - result would be basically a wide rectangular tube with back and front open for ventilation, would usage of accoustic foam and thin (0.5-1CM) layer for dampening work to make this thing reasonably quite(r)? Long story short: It's a flat rectangular box with sides open on the prolonged segments, inside that box is a noise emitting device, would foam help reduce noise enough, like around 20% or more? Thanks!
Hope some help will be heard!
I find your videos very informative, thank you! I have a question concerning Noise absorption. My cable box & TV give out high frequency. I'm not concerned with outside noises, or keeping noise inside the room, just absorbing this annoying noise! lol.. I have considered ceiling curtains, Wall curtains, and covering my wood headboard in thick fabric. Will any, or all of this work?? Please help.
Curtains won’t do anything for that I’m afraid.
Did ac can do the same thing
Awesome!
alr thx for the info
Half the videos of you rambling about what we are thinking already we searched your video to find out how to build this item. we already thought of all the things that you rambled on about for half the dang video
I’m sound proofing my ceiling and it has a depth of 16 inches should I put a bunch of layers of sound proofing insulation or should I leave an air void? I’m also installing a resilient Chanel.
Thank you for the help. I’m trying to soundproof a down stairs apartment and I’m watching your videos to get it done, I just don’t know if I should add a bunch of layers of sound proof insulation or leave a gap making an air void
Listening to pros suggest filling the void with fluffy insulation, but do not pack it tight. Small air gap is OK but not necessary.
maybe soundproof your mic first. using too much gain, clips like hell XD