noreasters
noreasters t1_ircm7mt wrote
Reply to comment by elemenohpee in Is it safe to use faced insulation between internal walls/ceilings for soundproofing? by Kortalh
The real deadening is in the slowing of the sound waves.
Sound waves must vibrate the material to pass through.
2 layers of drywall with flexible material between means sound wave must vibrate outside panel with inside panel resisting and the filler material acting as a spring damper…BEFORE the sound can begin to vibrate the second board, now fighting the motion of the first.
After the sound passes that material it will have MUCH less power and ability to travel distance or vibrate other walls.
Edit: this means 1/4” drywall, or most any hard material, can be used; 1/4” drywall is cheap and relatively easy to work with.
noreasters t1_irbqfo3 wrote
Reply to Is it safe to use faced insulation between internal walls/ceilings for soundproofing? by Kortalh
Add a second layer of 1/4” drywall (with caulk or sound dampening epoxy on top of old drywall).
Mass slows sound wave propagation and drywall is more dense than insulation, adding the material between old and new drywall forces sound waves to energize both boards with little direct transfer of that energy…highly effective.
noreasters t1_j9hja12 wrote
Reply to comment by Little_Duckling in Emotion dysregulation predicts belief in conspiracy theories, study finds by lolfuys
Are the space lasers Orthodox?