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#41
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Hard to tell in your picture, but can you break down exactly what
cables you are running and for what device? It looks like I see an f-fitting, an HDMI (?) and component cables, the other cables not sure about. |
#42
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On Oct 9, 3:29 pm, dpb wrote:
Ron wrote: Well, my previous home had ALL of the interior walls insulated, and it was MUCH quieter than my current home that doesn't have ANY interior walls insulated. Again, it depends on what was actually done. As someone else noted, it's mass and isolation that do sound deadening effectively, and a simple fiberglass batt doesn't accomplish much of either. That's not to say one can't do effective sound isolation, but it has to be more than simply adding 3" pink glass in a tubafor wall to be of much benefit. So, your builder apparently knew what were doing and took some steps. As noted earlier, that's what I presumed (perhaps erroneously, he's not come back w/ a real clarification when asked that I've seen so far) OP had as that's what I ran into most frequently. I had remembered insulation was fairly effective, but apparently not. http://www.saecollege.de/reference_m...TC%20Chart.htm has “sound transmission class” numbers for different wall constructions. Insulation adds, but not a lot (like you said). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_transmission_class has more information on STC and says it is "roughly the decibel reduction in noise a partition can provide". A local university hospital used 5/8 rock on 3.5" metal studs with insulation between patient rooms (might have been double 5/8 rock each side). But they were real strict on penetrations. Electrical boxes had to be in different stud partitions. Doors had seals on all 4 sides. Cracks are a major flaw in isolation. ===================== I agree with whoever said you want to fish between the insulation and drywall, not thorough the insulation. -- bud-- |
#43
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On Fri, 10 Oct 2008 09:28:18 -0700 (PDT), bud--
wrote: On Oct 9, 3:29 pm, dpb wrote: Ron wrote: Well, my previous home had ALL of the interior walls insulated, and it was MUCH quieter than my current home that doesn't have ANY interior walls insulated. Again, it depends on what was actually done. As someone else noted, it's mass and isolation that do sound deadening effectively, and a simple fiberglass batt doesn't accomplish much of either. That's not to say one can't do effective sound isolation, but it has to be more than simply adding 3" pink glass in a tubafor wall to be of much benefit. So, your builder apparently knew what were doing and took some steps. As noted earlier, that's what I presumed (perhaps erroneously, he's not come back w/ a real clarification when asked that I've seen so far) OP had as that's what I ran into most frequently. I had remembered insulation was fairly effective, but apparently not. Fibreglass insulation is medeocre at best for sound proofing, but rock wool is quite effective (also known as mineral wool or spun slag) http://www.saecollege.de/reference_m...TC%20Chart.htm has €śsound transmission class€ť numbers for different wall constructions. Insulation adds, but not a lot (like you said). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_transmission_class has more information on STC and says it is "roughly the decibel reduction in noise a partition can provide". A local university hospital used 5/8 rock on 3.5" metal studs with insulation between patient rooms (might have been double 5/8 rock each side). But they were real strict on penetrations. Electrical boxes had to be in different stud partitions. Doors had seals on all 4 sides. Cracks are a major flaw in isolation. ===================== I agree with whoever said you want to fish between the insulation and drywall, not thorough the insulation. ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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