acoustic advice resonating wall panels


Hi,

I have wall panels in the corners of my converted garage behind my speakers that resonate when you turn up the volume. It seems to be a problem in the 100-1000 HZ range only.

Can someone suggest a material to put behind the hard panel that would absorb that sort of resonance.

thanks

Michael
radioheadokplayer
Only a specific material cannot absorb the resonance. The most important thing is how you have designed this?? And it's not so easy to design an effective panel at home. Different types of cheap & very effective panels are now available in the market. Please visit http://www.acousticmanufacturer.com/Noise-Barrier-on-Temporary-Fence-for-Construction-Site.html to have an idea about different types of panel. Thanks
I placed some real mondo traps in the corners and a mini trap behind listening position near the wall and the sound got much better with improved bass and overall sounding much more lively so am happy and ain't gonna mess with success ....at least for now
The sound pressure peaks force the panels to vibrate, the very thing that the panels are intended to tame. If you take an empty box sealed on all sides except one side and place it anywhere in the room where there's a sound pressure peak or reflected acoustic wave - while playing a test tone circa 300-400 Hz - the box will vibrate strongly. That's why you need to throw everything but the kitchen sink at the sound pressure peaks. Tiny bowl resonators, diffusers, absorbers, Helmholtz resonators, whatever, since the peaks cover a wide range of frequencies. And the peaks occur in the 3D space of the room as well as room boundaries. So the problem is severe.
Owens Corning fiberglass specs show which freqs are absorbed for each model. I think 703 or 705 probably do what you need. Cheers,
Spencer
Maybe add another layer of sheet rock and put some fiberglass on the back of that.