
are moving all kinds of stuff in front of my window. When they go over bumps, whatever they're carrying bounces around on the trailer and creates a loud sound. I have yet to record it with a good mic and plot the spectrum of it but to my ear it sounds mostly like mid/high-frequency. Despite wearing earplugs it wakes me up early and I'm planning on doing something about it.
What I'm building to solve this problem for me is not technically a studio, but I'm looking for sound isolation and this seemed to be the best subforum on this site. I'm looking to build a sleeping pod: it will have a wooden frame, isolated from the ground on neoprene isolation pads for the right weight, and screwed on the wooden frame is a drywall/green glue/drywall assembly.
I've started the design, viewable here: link to onshape document
I have yet to add a door (solid wood with a quiet ventilation system (Aeropac) to the design but the basics are there: 12.5mm drywall, green glue in between, and 5mm spacing between drywall and the legs of the thing, so I can seal everything with acoustical sealer (which is more dense than drywall).
From my understanding, this will isolate sound waves according to the 'mass law': https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/soun ... _1409.html
One panel is 9.5kg/m2, two is ~20kg/m2, so a value of 30dB isolation (at 500 Hz). At 63 Hz this is 30 - 13 = 17 dB isolation which is already quite good, and of course it gets even better at high frequencies. Cost should be < €1000.
Does anyone have feedback for the design? Can I make it better without a 15cm air gap or is this already at the sweet spot?