Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Plans and things, layout, style, where do I put my near-fields etc.

Moderators: Aaronw, kendale, John Sayers

Gregwor
Moderator
Posts: 1501
Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2017 6:03 pm
Location: St. Albert, Alberta, Canada

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by Gregwor »

I designed/drew these up for him (John, don't worry, I didn't charge him but instead asked him to donate to the forum) :thu:
Atomicus Silencer 1.jpg
Atomicus Silencer 2.jpg
Atomicus Silencer 3.jpg
Greg
It appears that you've made the mistake most people do. You started building without consulting this forum.
atomicus
Posts: 39
Joined: Thu May 03, 2018 10:44 pm
Location: South of England, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by atomicus »

Just a quick update on this... has taken me a while, mostly due to COVID related delays in getting supplies, but have finally got all my boxes built now. I went double layer, plywood and MDF, so they're pretty solid (and weight a tonne!)

Next stage is getting the rest of the room finished, and then getting the boxes up and all connected etc, but I have a few more things to do before I'm at that stage. For now, I'm parking them out of harms way.

A huge thanks to Gregwor, couldn't have done this without his help! :)
baffle-box1.jpg
baffle-box2.jpg
baffle-box3.jpg
Fred Pearson
Posts: 27
Joined: Wed Feb 06, 2019 9:45 pm
Location: United Kingdom, Warwickshire
Contact:

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by Fred Pearson »

Just wanted to jump in and let you know that reading this single thread has increased my knowledge of HVAC ducting tenfold. Thank you!
John Steel
Posts: 120
Joined: Fri Nov 24, 2017 12:07 am
Location: Hastings, East Sussex, United Kingdom
Contact:

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by John Steel »

Impressively neat job! Can I ask what you used to cut the foam with? Best wishes, John.
atomicus
Posts: 39
Joined: Thu May 03, 2018 10:44 pm
Location: South of England, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by atomicus »

Update:

Finally. Pretty much done now. Boxes are all hooked up and room is all but finished. Plasterer is due next week. Has been quite the journey to get to this point, and I'm just glad it's nearly complete! Many thanks again @Gregwor.
atomicus
Posts: 39
Joined: Thu May 03, 2018 10:44 pm
Location: South of England, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by atomicus »

John Steel wrote:Impressively neat job! Can I ask what you used to cut the foam with? Best wishes, John.
Apologies, I only just saw your post. For the foam, I used a sharp insulation knife I purchased from Amazon - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Connex-COXT670 ... B007HKYCOG in combination with a large metal square to ensure straight edges. It was easy to cut, I just had to measure carefully as I'd built the boxes first, so everything had to fit quite precisely.

Updated pictures above. The one thing I'm having a bit of a conundrum about now is the airflow. I'd already settled on having the fan as extract - I could still change this to intake as I haven't hooked the fan up yet, but from all my research, extract was indicated to me as the best option. With the passive return though, I'm unsure if I should be using a filter or not on this, and if so, what exactly? I've seen quite a few of the carbon cylindrical types (used mostly for hydroponics), but these seem to be more commonly used for extract, and always seem to incorporate a fan. But because my intake is PASSIVE, I don't know if this is the correct thing to use, not least because it would significantly impact the airflow resistance. Any thoughts? Maybe I don't need a filter at all, just some mesh to prevent any creepy crawlies getting in. I certainly don't want anything building a nest inside my baffle boxes lol!
Paulus87
Senior Member
Posts: 652
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2014 8:42 am
Location: Wales, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by Paulus87 »

atomicus wrote:
John Steel wrote:Impressively neat job! Can I ask what you used to cut the foam with? Best wishes, John.
Apologies, I only just saw your post. For the foam, I used a sharp insulation knife I purchased from Amazon - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Connex-COXT670 ... B007HKYCOG in combination with a large metal square to ensure straight edges. It was easy to cut, I just had to measure carefully as I'd built the boxes first, so everything had to fit quite precisely.

Updated pictures above. The one thing I'm having a bit of a conundrum about now is the airflow. I'd already settled on having the fan as extract - I could still change this to intake as I haven't hooked the fan up yet, but from all my research, extract was indicated to me as the best option. With the passive return though, I'm unsure if I should be using a filter or not on this, and if so, what exactly? I've seen quite a few of the carbon cylindrical types (used mostly for hydroponics), but these seem to be more commonly used for extract, and always seem to incorporate a fan. But because my intake is PASSIVE, I don't know if this is the correct thing to use, not least because it would significantly impact the airflow resistance. Any thoughts? Maybe I don't need a filter at all, just some mesh to prevent any creepy crawlies getting in. I certainly don't want anything building a nest inside my baffle boxes lol!
The advantage of having the fan on the supply side is that you can filter the air before it enters the silencers and it will also pressurise your room, which keeps dust out.

Paul
Paul
atomicus
Posts: 39
Joined: Thu May 03, 2018 10:44 pm
Location: South of England, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by atomicus »

Paulus87 wrote:
atomicus wrote:
John Steel wrote:Impressively neat job! Can I ask what you used to cut the foam with? Best wishes, John.
Apologies, I only just saw your post. For the foam, I used a sharp insulation knife I purchased from Amazon - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Connex-COXT670 ... B007HKYCOG in combination with a large metal square to ensure straight edges. It was easy to cut, I just had to measure carefully as I'd built the boxes first, so everything had to fit quite precisely.

Updated pictures above. The one thing I'm having a bit of a conundrum about now is the airflow. I'd already settled on having the fan as extract - I could still change this to intake as I haven't hooked the fan up yet, but from all my research, extract was indicated to me as the best option. With the passive return though, I'm unsure if I should be using a filter or not on this, and if so, what exactly? I've seen quite a few of the carbon cylindrical types (used mostly for hydroponics), but these seem to be more commonly used for extract, and always seem to incorporate a fan. But because my intake is PASSIVE, I don't know if this is the correct thing to use, not least because it would significantly impact the airflow resistance. Any thoughts? Maybe I don't need a filter at all, just some mesh to prevent any creepy crawlies getting in. I certainly don't want anything building a nest inside my baffle boxes lol!
The advantage of having the fan on the supply side is that you can filter the air before it enters the silencers and it will also pressurise your room, which keeps dust out.

Paul
So if the extract side has the fan (as I had planned), I am more likely to suffer with dust build up in the room and baffle boxes?

If the fan is on the supply side as you suggest, I assume the extract is then passive? Are there any disadvantages to this?

It's been a long time since I looked into this, but I recall the general consensus across what I read being that the fan on extract was better... I just don't remember why.
Paulus87
Senior Member
Posts: 652
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2014 8:42 am
Location: Wales, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by Paulus87 »

atomicus wrote:
Paulus87 wrote:
atomicus wrote:
John Steel wrote:Impressively neat job! Can I ask what you used to cut the foam with? Best wishes, John.
Apologies, I only just saw your post. For the foam, I used a sharp insulation knife I purchased from Amazon - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Connex-COXT670 ... B007HKYCOG in combination with a large metal square to ensure straight edges. It was easy to cut, I just had to measure carefully as I'd built the boxes first, so everything had to fit quite precisely.

Updated pictures above. The one thing I'm having a bit of a conundrum about now is the airflow. I'd already settled on having the fan as extract - I could still change this to intake as I haven't hooked the fan up yet, but from all my research, extract was indicated to me as the best option. With the passive return though, I'm unsure if I should be using a filter or not on this, and if so, what exactly? I've seen quite a few of the carbon cylindrical types (used mostly for hydroponics), but these seem to be more commonly used for extract, and always seem to incorporate a fan. But because my intake is PASSIVE, I don't know if this is the correct thing to use, not least because it would significantly impact the airflow resistance. Any thoughts? Maybe I don't need a filter at all, just some mesh to prevent any creepy crawlies getting in. I certainly don't want anything building a nest inside my baffle boxes lol!
The advantage of having the fan on the supply side is that you can filter the air before it enters the silencers and it will also pressurise your room, which keeps dust out.

Paul
So if the extract side has the fan (as I had planned), I am more likely to suffer with dust build up in the room and baffle boxes?

If the fan is on the supply side as you suggest, I assume the extract is then passive? Are there any disadvantages to this?
Yes, dust could be an issue.

I am not aware of any disadvantages, perhaps it depends on the climate? But, I am also not aware of the advantages of doing it the other way round that Gregwor was talking about.

There's other advantages to positive pressurised rooms; it helps to keep the doors closed up tight against the seals.

and this:

"In reverse flow conditions, when the air flows in the opposite direction of the
sound wave the effective speed of sound decreases slightly,causing the sound to take
a longer period of time to travel the silencer passages. This results in improved low
frequency insertion loss performance.

The opposite is true of forward flow applications. When the air is flowing in the
direction of sound propagation the result is decreased acoustic performance at low
frequencies and increased performance at high frequencies."

This is taken from a quote by Rod Gervais, who was referencing the Price Silencers & Panels Engineering Guide.

Paul
Paul
atomicus
Posts: 39
Joined: Thu May 03, 2018 10:44 pm
Location: South of England, UK

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by atomicus »

Paulus87 wrote: Yes, dust could be an issue.

I am not aware of any disadvantages, perhaps it depends on the climate? But, I am also not aware of the advantages of doing it the other way round that Gregwor was talking about.

There's other advantages to positive pressurised rooms; it helps to keep the doors closed up tight against the seals.

and this:

"In reverse flow conditions, when the air flows in the opposite direction of the
sound wave the effective speed of sound decreases slightly,causing the sound to take
a longer period of time to travel the silencer passages. This results in improved low
frequency insertion loss performance.

The opposite is true of forward flow applications. When the air is flowing in the
direction of sound propagation the result is decreased acoustic performance at low
frequencies and increased performance at high frequencies."

This is taken from a quote by Rod Gervais, who was referencing the Price Silencers & Panels Engineering Guide.

Paul

OK, many thanks for that. I think I will switch to intake on the fan side. Worst case, I can always revert to extract, but from what you're saying it should all work out fine. :)
John Steel
Posts: 120
Joined: Fri Nov 24, 2017 12:07 am
Location: Hastings, East Sussex, United Kingdom
Contact:

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by John Steel »

Any thoughts? Maybe I don't need a filter at all, just some mesh to prevent any creepy crawlies getting in. I certainly don't want anything building a nest inside my baffle boxes lol!
I have put a filter box on my air intake path. It has a replaceable dust filter which I'm told is also insect proof. Some designers also choose to filter both the supply and exhaust paths. Bear in mind that whatever you install, the fan has to be powerful enough to meet the airflow requirements of your room and also overcome the static pressure inherent in your HVAC system. Every component added to the path will add a small amount of resistance to airflow or static pressure. This can be cumulatively significant and is tricky to work out although there is a very helpful app available from ASRHAE (American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers) which helps to detail static pressure for specific HVAC components. I'm sure you'll have seen this already, but if not, this thread is a must read. ATB John.
https://johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewtopi ... =1&t=21752
christophercarr86
Posts: 22
Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2022 6:56 am
Location: Ontario, Canada

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by christophercarr86 »

Hey everyone, bringing up an old thread here.

Is there any negatives to putting a fan on both the intake and exhaust. I was thinking about putting it on both and having then independently switching, so I can turn on either the fresh air or exhaust only if it was just to get some of the stuffiness out of the air. Or should they always be running together if I do the 2 fans ?
gullfo
Moderator
Posts: 5344
Joined: Wed Jul 13, 2005 3:55 am
Location: Panama City Beach, FL USA
Contact:

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by gullfo »

generally speaking, in a closed hvac system you have a single fan to circulate - and presumes an efficient ducting system to support that. an adjunct to that sys is the fresh air ventilator which removes and replaces a percentage of that air, and ideally preserves most of the temperature and humidity to improve energy efficiency. e.g an ERV or HRV unit attached to a forced air system.

for open systems approach, you _could_ get away with a single fan, however, you're likely better off with two fans to ensure proper flow. you still need some fresh air ventilation to remove CO2 and replace consumed oxygen.
Glenn
christophercarr86
Posts: 22
Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2022 6:56 am
Location: Ontario, Canada

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by christophercarr86 »

Excellent, thanks for the info.

I have a HVAC system in the house for hot/cold.

In addition will be adding to fans, one to bring in fresh air and one for exhaust. Any suggestions on the best vent fans I could use for this ? (Powerful ? Quiet ?)
(Not planning on an HRV or ERV).

Thanks!
gullfo
Moderator
Posts: 5344
Joined: Wed Jul 13, 2005 3:55 am
Location: Panama City Beach, FL USA
Contact:

Re: Please help with acoustic baffle box...

Post by gullfo »

you need fresh air exchange. you could use an HRV/ERV, or not caring about energy conservation, not. but either way you need to remove CO2 and add oxygen. the rooms will be hyper-insulated and sealed. air has to flow pretty much continuously. likely heating or cooling as well. so, you'll want multiple zoning (and prefer multiple speeds) to efficiently operate the studio separately from the rest of the house.
Glenn
Post Reply