A question I'm curious about:
Suppose I were to build a studio in a place where noise wasn't much of a problem, away from civilization and other people. Would building my ceiling and/or walls out of glass entirely (with a supportive frame, of course) be effective for treating bass frequencies? (as well as being pretty!)
The reason I'm asking is that windows reflect back high frequencies much better than low frequencies, so any frequencies reflected back into the room would contain (much?) more high-frequency content than low frequency content, the low frequencies having passed onto the air outside the roof/walls.
Is this a realistic design idea?
Windows for walls as "bass traps"
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Ethan Winer
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Re: Windows for walls as "bass traps"
> Is this a realistic design idea? <
You're on the right track, but even thin glass reflects bass a little. I suspect that by the time you made the glass thin enough to pass everything below 300 Hz - the upper limit of what is considered "bass" frequencies - the glass would be too thin to be practical.
--Ethan
You're on the right track, but even thin glass reflects bass a little. I suspect that by the time you made the glass thin enough to pass everything below 300 Hz - the upper limit of what is considered "bass" frequencies - the glass would be too thin to be practical.
--Ethan
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ozymandias
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Of course not a possible scenario for a recording studio where a chirping bird can ruin a take ... I was referring to built in, immobile windows.
Edit: has anyone here ever been to such a studio? Has anyone ever BUILT such a thing? Sure it sounds good on paper but I wonder whether there are any case studies out there ...
Edit: has anyone here ever been to such a studio? Has anyone ever BUILT such a thing? Sure it sounds good on paper but I wonder whether there are any case studies out there ...