There, put my thoughts in one place @ https://imgur.com/a/wz9fS8U
It turned into a pretty big slide deck but now I finally have a feeling for designing these magic boxes.
Common fails:
- people read about resonance frequency, but forget the optimal size rule, or absorption cross section formula. Then you get tiny resonators, lots of it, that do nothing.
- related: if you divide aperture (opening) into several smaller ones, the resonance volume goes down with it. Don't do that.
- forgetting about Q. Too high means it is unusable in real life, but lowering it by stuffing needs to be done really carefully, single digit Rayls is enough.
- ignoring resistance. At tiny hole sizes, the boundary layer of air above the solid works as resistor, but if you want to kill bass, and you remember the single hole > many tiny one rule, you NEED a porous absorber layer or you get infinity Q.
It also contains a magic box design that works as broadband bass trap, equal to an open window:
(it is 105x105 cm though, so absorption coefficient peaks at "only" ~1.3.)
Time to turn one of them into a test design. Maybe I'll do a small scale 82 hz test model first, that one may be placed anywhere along the long wall. Or a 80-90hz corner model above the subwoofer, 50x50x50 triangle works in Excel.
It turned into a pretty big slide deck but now I finally have a feeling for designing these magic boxes.
Common fails:
- people read about resonance frequency, but forget the optimal size rule, or absorption cross section formula. Then you get tiny resonators, lots of it, that do nothing.
- related: if you divide aperture (opening) into several smaller ones, the resonance volume goes down with it. Don't do that.
- forgetting about Q. Too high means it is unusable in real life, but lowering it by stuffing needs to be done really carefully, single digit Rayls is enough.
- ignoring resistance. At tiny hole sizes, the boundary layer of air above the solid works as resistor, but if you want to kill bass, and you remember the single hole > many tiny one rule, you NEED a porous absorber layer or you get infinity Q.
It also contains a magic box design that works as broadband bass trap, equal to an open window:
(it is 105x105 cm though, so absorption coefficient peaks at "only" ~1.3.)
Time to turn one of them into a test design. Maybe I'll do a small scale 82 hz test model first, that one may be placed anywhere along the long wall. Or a 80-90hz corner model above the subwoofer, 50x50x50 triangle works in Excel.