Unit Iv
Unit Iv
Unit Iv
• Let's look at structure borne sound. Have you ever been in a room on a
concrete slab where someone is bouncing a tennis ball 2 or 3 rooms away? If
you are standing on the same concrete slab with no breaks in it, you will hear
that tennis ball almost as if you were in the same room. You are not getting
any air borne sound transmission, this is all structure borne. Many people
think that having a high mass will stop all sound, but actually sound travels
faster in dense material than in air. The tennis ball experiment shows that
mass does not stop the sound at all, rather it transmits it to other parts of the
house—quite efficiently too.
AIR BORNE NOISE.
• The sounds we have discussed so far travel through the air, there is,
however, another class of sounds that is perhaps more irritating than
airborne sound. These are the impact sounds that travel through the solid
structure of a house, and especially through the floor-ceiling construction.
• Impact sounds include, for example, dropping of object on floor , scuffing
of feet, footfalls or slamming the door, machinery vibrations --- water pipe
hammering transmitted throughout a house by the water-supply pipes, and
fan and compressor noises transmitted directly from an air-conditioning
unit to the window and from there to the rest of the building structure are
all transmitted through rigid structures with almost no attenuation.
• As a result of a DIRECT IMPACT in one room large surfaces else where in
the building are set to vibrations radiating acoustical energy, also known as
IMPACT NOISE.
STRUCTURE BORN NOISE
60 dbs. 40 dbs.
T.L. = 20 DBS.
ISOLATION OF AIR BORNE OR STRUCTURE BORNE NOISE.
• Only two things stop sound - mass and space. You need mass to
contain the airborne sound, but then you also need space (an air gap
or similar unobstructed area) so that the structure borne sound can
not be transmitted. One could make use of sound isolation techniques
such as staggered stud walls and floors or resilient hangers and
channels hence, there is a high mass wall, an air gap, and then
another wall, making sound transmission difficult.
ENCLOSURES
MINI SOUNDPROOFED SERVER ROOM IN A BOX ENCLOSURE
NOISE CONTROL BY SCREENING
• Sturdier than
wooden fencing
Cost effective
Easy to install in
backyard.
• Looks cheaper and
not as versatile
Least effective
noise barrier
WOODEN FENCES
• Sound Lock allows you to limit the volume of your playback by detecting
the loudness and lowering it to the level you have set. So you no longer
have to bother with the loud action scenes and sound volume going
through the roof.
• Sound Lock adjusts the system volume per channel (up to 14 channels)
and generates a smooth sound output by lowering the volume during loud
scenes. It therefore enables you to watch movies without having to adjust
the volume manually every time it increases over the level of your comfort.
The application allows you to easily set the sound output limit by dragging
the bar to the desired level. Sound Lock displays sound output level for
every channel currently in use.
•
EXAMPLE OF A SOUND LOCK IN LITTLE THEATER
EXAMPLE OF A SOUND LOCK IN LEGITIMATE THEATER
DOUBLE DOOR
• The heavier a partition—that is, the more mass it has per unit
volume—the more effective a sound barrier it will be. A solid 6-in.-
thick concrete wall or an 8-in.-thick brick wall make much more
effective sound barriers. The reason is that the impinging air
molecules find it much more difficult to induce a vibratory motion in
a massive wall than in a lightweight wall. Weight makes the
difference. However, there is a limit to how much one can increase
the weight of a wall.
DOUBLE WALL CONSTRUCTION..CAVITY WALL