Bass Trap Square Type Acoustic Absorber 48 Inches x 3 Inches x 3 Inches
Overview
Acoustic foam is open-celled foam used for acoustic treatment. It attenuates airborne sound waves by increasing air resistance, thus reducing the amplitude of the waves. The energy is dissipated as heat. Acoustic Foam can be made in several different colors, sizes and thickness.
Acoustic foam comes in a variety of sizes and can be attached to walls, ceilings, doors, and other features of a room to control noise levels, vibration, and echoes.
Many acoustic foam products are treated with dyes and / or fire retardants.
The objective of acoustic foam is to improve the sound quality by removing residual sound in any space. Not only does the resonance and echo effects are kept in check, but the ambience of the room is contained within thus making it better soundproof for the outside. This purpose requires strategic placement of acoustic foam panels on walls, ceiling and floors, effectively eliminating resonance within the room.
Acoustic Enhancement
The objective is to enhance the properties of sound by improving speech clarity and sound quality.
For this reason, acoustic foam is often used in recording studios. The purpose is to reduce, but not entirely eliminate resonance within the room. This is achieved by placing similar sized pieces of foam, often in the shape of cones or triangles, on opposite walls.
How Acoustic Foam Works
Acoustic foam is a lightweight material made from polyurethane foam either polyether or polyester, and also extruded melamine foam. It is usually cut into tiles - often with pyramid or wedge shapes - which are suited to placing on the walls of a recording studio or a similar type of environment to act as a sound absorber, thus enhancing the sound quality within a room.
Features
Acoustic foam reduces or eliminates echoes and background noises by controlling the reverberation that sound can make by bouncing off walls. This type of sound absorption is different from soundproofing, which is typically used to keep sound from escaping or entering a room.
Acoustic foam typically deals more with the mid and high frequencies. To deal with lower frequencies, much thicker pieces of acoustic foam are needed; large pieces of acoustic foam are often placed in the corners of a room and are called acoustic foam corner bass traps.
Acoustic foam is primarily used in recording studios to minimize sound echoes. However, you can perform the same function in home theaters, manufacturing facilities, equipment warehouses, home offices, gymnasiums and auditoriums. It can be placed in any room where an optimal sound mix is desired.
Acoustic foam is often used to reduce echoes by attaching it to the walls of large rooms, like churches, synagogues and temples. Using jagged acoustic foam to baffle the sound can help, as does hanging sound baffles that break up the empty space in high ceilings and large rooms.
The effectiveness of acoustic foam panels can be increased by ensuring there is an air gap between the foam panels and the walls. Doing this exposes a great surface area of the foam panels to incident waves increasing the amount of absorption. Spacing the foam from the wall also has the advantage of reducing any damage spray adhesive would have on a wall or painted surface.
In some restaurants the pictures on the walls can be acoustical panels, obviously with an image over it.
Our products are tailor-made to eliminate sound reflections and are very porous, with many pathways that redirect sound and a large surface area to accommodate the friction that cause it to lose energy. They have noticeable capacity to block sound, but the absorption properties enhance isolation by stopping air movement that would otherwise allow sound and noise to travel.
Sound absorber thickness has the greatest impact on the sound absorbing qualities. The inherent composition and porousness of our acoustical material is formulated to maximize acoustical performance.
Proper application and selection of thickness can greatly improve the acoustic properties of a room without sounding lean or dead.
Bass Trap Square Type
The next best thing to egg crate design. Serious recording and playback room needs serious acoustic treatment. The three-inch thick absorbers provide more than sufficient sound absorption up to the mid-low frequencies.
Specifications
Material ………………. Open Cell Polyurethane Acoustical Foam
Pattern ………………. Scientifically engineered pattern designed to absorb a wide range of frequencies up the mid-lows. The linear wedge pattern offers excellent absorption and allows you to create many different designs. Install vertically, horizontally, diagonally, checkerboard or create your own design.