Today we're back with Music City Acoustics to talk about how they build their acoustic panels 👊 What is your next DIY studio project? Be sure to check out the last video we did with Music City Acoustics all about common questions when it comes to studio acoustics ruclips.net/video/0uq7CJE_gW0/видео.html
I dont mean to be so off topic but does someone know a method to get back into an Instagram account? I stupidly lost my account password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me.
@Royce Johnny i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im in the hacking process atm. Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
Hi RJB, on a small scale yes it would be. However, when making panels on a larger scale there are a couple of reasons making the frames larger is not the best option. 1. When building the frames, we would have a ton of wood waste. With the dimensions of our frames, we have almost zero wood waste. The mineral wool is made of 70% recycled materials, so while it is unfortunate we can not use all of it, the waste doesn't have the same environmental impact. 2. If we were to make the frames larger, they would be 49.5"x25.5" making them significantly harder and more expensive to ship to our customers. Hope this clarifies.
@@MusicCityAcoustics I was wondering about the approach too, and it makes perfect sense. But that creates next question: can't wool offcuts be squished down in some mesh tube (wrapped in cloth again) to make some kind of low cost bass trap? Or would it be to much work for the potential turnup?
For anyone wondering about the nail-gun, you don't need one. If you want to make an uber good looking one that offers slightly better performance in the low end, here's what I've done: Get a $20 pocket-hole jig and some Tight Bond II wood glue. Pocket hole screws aren't strong but they'll hold it together for the glue to dry. That particular glue is stronger than wood itself, also join the short pieces to the face of the long ones. The benefit of this method is it lets you keep the joinery on the inside with no visible screws or nails on the outside, and you can apply wood finish to the outside frame which looks really nice. The other caveat is if you use plywood you have exposed edges which require iron-on laminate strips ("edge banding") before finishing, and the whole process can take days instead of hours. The edge banding doesn't take very long and makes the cheap plywood look solid wood, you just gotta be patient cutting it off with a utlity knife. I also use a 3" hole-saw that attaches to a drill and spaced out 8 holes in the long sides and 4 in the short. When you factor in the *hole-cutting + sanding, + laminate + wood conditioner + wood stain and clear, coats* .... it's a. lot of work. The next issue is you need to fasten the fabric to the inside of the frame in order to keep the outside stained wood visible. This requires cutting some thin wood slightly shorter than the outer frame and using it to pinch the fabric up against the inside edges, flush with the outer face of the panel. This was by far the most confusing part for me at first, but when you see a white fabric pop through the holes of a dark wood stained wood on the outside -- it seems worth it. Especially that moment you hang 10 ten of them. They'll be night and day prettier than the bare minimum with slightly better bass absorption because of the holes.
You guys come up with amazing videos. I see that the fabric they use is very elastic, which gives great overall look. For not so elastic materials I would not start from the corners when stapling but rather go from mid to sides and go around the panel frame just as you would tighten screws on your wheels. This is what I was given as an advice from a carpenter and with the panels I made it turned out amazing. Keep up the amazing work, love your videos!!
Our standard fabric is quite stretchy but we also commonly use fabric from Guilford of Maine that has little to no stretch. The same wrapping technique works great for those fabrics as well. There is a tone of ways this can be done, so this is definitely just one option.
I've been building my own panels for years! Good video👍 simple and simple😉 I have optimized it with a perforated wooden plate 3mm thick with hundreds of small holes in between. The diameter of the holes determines the degree of absorption by the panel, the larger the holes, the more broadband is absorbed. Broadband usually means down to about 250h. You can do this if you don't want to process all frequencies so that a part is absorbed and a part is reflected. It can also be rounded off slightly for a slight diffusion so that it is scattered back into the room! 😉 Very simple but effective! It's easy to know that basses cannot be absorbed so too thin! need more material, respectiv thicker panals! this is good for mid to hi absorption !! As shown in the video. About 3.5cm are hi-mid, mid to low 35cm and from 100heart down to 20heart lowend up to 350cm! One would have to insulate This is roughly the formula because a sinus wave up to 12 meters long is generated in the bass wave. depends on the frequency .. Have fun building it yourself! 👍😉
@@seanhayesmusic44 Thermo hemp or mineral wool is both good. With thermal hemp the tightness is better and no harmful substances in it 100% of course up to 90% it consists of hemp barrels and non-flammable! 😉
I checked their website - they have broadband panels that are 4.5" deep, and bass traps at 6.5" deep- but you're absolutely right. Funny story - yesterday one of the dense wool panels I had bought (and hate) fell off the ceiling (they're just attached using 3M stickies right now). I re-measured in that part of the room and found there's a bass issue in that corner at something like 60 hz. What makes it worse is that there's about a 2' chamber between that and a bookshelf that is apparently literally shaking the wall in that one part of the room. I was only using a 1.5" deep high-mid panel there which does nothing for those frequencies for sure!
I´ve always wondered if the fabric is enough to keep the rockwool particles from the room air or should you wrap the inside material in plastic for example? Especially for bedroom studios where you might sleep and spend a lot of time in. Thanks for a great video!
It depends. If it's a bass trap you're building, plastic is fine as bass freqs will pass through the plastic. However, if it's broadband absorption, the plastic will reflect the high-mid and high freqs, which defeats the purpose of it. What you can do, is use several layers of breathable material (like muslin) as your first and maybe even second layer, before you wrap with the finish fabric. Another great material is Dacron (polyester backing). One or two inches of Dacron will ensure very few fibres escape and it also has the benefit of having great acoustical properties for sound absorption.
Hi Ville, most fabrics work quite well to keep the mineral wool in the panels and not in your room. It also helps that once a panel is made there is nothing to disturb the mineral wool (e.g. cutting, ripping, tearing, etc) so very few if any particles would shed from it, even if it were left uncovered. With that said, it is important not to use any fabric that has a very loose fabric weave. Burlap is an example of a fabric commonly used for panels that does not work well for this. As mentioned above, wrapping panels in plastic would not be advisable in most bedroom applications as it will cause the panels to be reflective in the high frequencies.
Use acoustic cotton batts instead; harmless and equally effective. Rockwool is the new asbestos, not meant to be exposed like that. and only plastic can't contain the tiny particles. Plastic negates the material's absorption properties in the mid and hi frequencies.
@@MusicCityAcoustics No acoustically tranparent fabric can't prevent the particles from coming through it. And they'll shed even when ¨undisturbed¨. Stop using mineral insulation in the fucking open where people can breathe it; use recycled cotton batts instead !
Nice and very understanding, is there any specific requirment for the backing fabric? like,airflow or somthing,is it pointless if i use Polypropylene material as backing fabric?
No, mineral wool in special textile, special cloth dont missed micro dispersion, it's not going outside box. Most studios have this panels. But if you make like this. Be careful, micro dispersion mineral wool in your lungs, create CANCER in 5 years breathing this.
To be fair I'm not sure much wool would ever be escaping the box. It's not like there will be much air current or disruption in general when indoors that might cause the wool to come out of the box.
Excellent video! You don't specify the frequency range for the panel you built. All rooms have bass issues. You must start at the low end and solve the problem from 25 Hz to 110 Hz. How thick of a panel like yours would do the trick? Thanks 👍!
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@@LauraBrown-hg2ry if you want soundproof curtains, get the PVC overlapping strip curtains in the biggest thickness you can handle. You'll drop way more than 25db, but they will be fixed (rather than sliding), you get a decent air seal if you set them up right and it keeps the heat in.
probably won’t tell you because rather than using youtube to share knowledge, some people want to make money as much as possible, to the point where they won’t tell you something like this, so you’ll by their product.
Any advice? .... got a small untreated room, having major issues around 140Hz cause of the low ceiling (about 7 feet high). Gonna get some wall panels and clouds made. Should I make 5cm thick panels with 5cm gaps behind them or make them 10cm and hang against the walls? Also, what's the best density I should get? Note, with the clouds I can also make them 10cm and hang them with a 10cm gap, but the walls are an issue.
Wouldn't it be loosing fibers/dust with fabric cover only? Some people recommend one layer of pallet strach/film and then putting into frame to wrap with fabric. I'm onto doing my second set of panels and was wandering about that. Thank you for the video.
Thank you for the video. Please take notice that thr hardest part was glossed over amd not shown.... the corners. I figured it out eventually but that's kinda shady
What's your stance on using a thin plastic back to wrap the wool? The idea is to make sure the fibers don't get into the air but mainly: If you use a thinner plate but dense material that'll have difficulties dampening lower frequencies but is excellent for higher frequencies, some of the higher frequencies will get reflected by the plastic making for an overall flatter response. Of course at the expense of some performance but I'd rather have weaker dapening on the highs than the room majorly lacking in highs because now the lows can overpower the lacking highs.
If you find you are losing too much the very high end wrapping with the thinnest plastic you can find is great. Think the thickness of a dry cleaning bag; that way it only bounces back the very high end but absorbs most everything else. I have seen people doing this in panel building. In fact in my studio I made frames on my concrete wall to fit these very mineral wool boards and then covered with Burlap fabric and then added VG Douglas fir 3/4" boards with about 4" gaps in between(can be adjusted depending on dampening required) so it looks nice but also reflects back some higher end. On softer woods I use minimal varnish wiped on tight just enough so I can clean the boards and not overcoat the wood and make it sound too harsh. You can hear the difference in sound before and after 3 coats of varnish on a wood floor in a room so I would assume the same applies to wood in studios depending on the density of the wood used.
@@inmemoryofin good question. You know when you walk into a new house and it echos and there is a lot of reverb? but then you move furniture into the room and things dampen up? Kind of like that but maybe more subtle but noticeable. I am talking 100 year old Douglas fir floors, a really soft wood that absorbs quite a bit of sound without a hard as heck protective varnish.
THanks - Can you tell me why some people hang them like pictures with big gaps between and others cover every inch of their wall with accoustic panels?
I’m practically first time building, anything really but, some in my basement right now and realize how much a friggin table comes in handy. My back after finishing one iyiyiyeeeeeee
Why not make the panels to fit the the mineral wool as purchased, getting rid of the step of cutting them down to size? Is that rigid comfort board 80 by chance?
I might have missed something. Is there a reason why the frames aren't just made to perfectly fit a piece of insulation? That would save a step for every panel.
This is just too cool! I love DIY videos like this! What would be cool is an in-between. I'd love to just purchase the template used in the video to make the frame! Not fully DIY, but not fully constructed, just a time saver ;)
I watched it though. Haven't learned all that much new here. Making these panels is a true DIY job -- just get some foam board or mineral wool piece with a a hard backing, and staple some fabric onto it. Putting them in a wood frame makes the result fancier.
Great suggestion! If you want a bunch of mineral wool fibers floating around in your studio that you will enviably end up breathing in. I think the the frame helps contain everything better.
You need an open cell foam, can't use closed cell for sound absorbing panels. And you can't have any hard backing either, that's why you need the wood frame.
When hanging vertical, Is it better to have the horizontal pieces longer or the vertical pieces longer for structural stability of the frame? In this video he does vertical pieces longer overlapping the horizontal pieces. Is there a reason for this?
Great to see a full build of one of these panels. How do you then mount these on a wall? Just a picture wire across the back, hung up on picture hooks, or is there a better way? Cheers
They can be hung with a single French cleat on the back, in addition to the method you described. The downside to this is that a spacer is necessary to include the necessary air gap. I also have a few hung from the ceiling, connected at the top of the panel with two hooks. If hanging, using small turnbuckles between the hooks and rope/chain allows them to be hang straight with a level. Some folks put them on easel stands as an alternative to hanging.
This is awesome. No glue = No fumes. I've tried putting my own together and they didn't turn out nearly this well. What really kills me is that these will likely do a much better job than the craptastic panels I got from Amazon for about the same price. I just checked - the broadband panels are way better. I'll be calling (or stopping by if possible) soon I think since they're right here in Nashville. Thanks for this run-thru!
Anybody else having a hell of time tracking down single packs of rockwool? Any suggestions for best places to order a pack of 8 batts? I'm shooting for 3x48x24.
I get them at Home Creepo in 1.5 inch and double up if needed. I believe brand is Rockwool(formerly Roxul) Comfort board 60 and there is a 2 inch version as well. *Note: not all Home Depots carry this but it can certainly be ordered. Usually $50-60 for a pack of them. 6 or 8 depending on thickness.
Hoping you can help me , can we use non-rigid insulation. Here in NZ we can get fiberglass insulation,but its not in rigid boards. I can stuff it as compact as possible though, would that work?
Hi Chantelle, you can absolutely use nonrigid insulation. For acoustic panels that are 2" to 6" deep, the performance won't be quite as effective but they will still work really well! For really deep bass traps this can actually be beneficial just make sure not to compact it down! Whatever product you end up using, it should be in its original state. Compressing fluffy insulation actually makes its performance worse.
Amazing video! Especially love your tempalte table. However.... I am to improve the nursery for my son and i wanted to hang a few panels in there to improve the reverb. As many people are mentioning there could potentially be some health issues with wrapping mineral wool in nothing but a thin peace of cloth.? Also giving this is for my son, the panels are tp be hung fairly low in order to catch the direct reflections of his mouth and toys and therefore it is to be expected that these panels will be hit, tapped, get in contact with toys or in other way be handled a tad rough. In general theres 2 questions. - Is it safe with mineral wool or other insulation alike, or what other material would you recommend (considering the panels will not be left in peace) - How/What can you do to improve the sustainability of the panel with minimal cost of effect?
Hey, just got a question . There are articles about Rockwool that there are risks of getting lung disease and cancer for using it in door... What do you think ?
Hi Emad, with both mineralwool and fiberglass products it is important to protect your lungs and skin when working with the material. In our experience, neither product will shed particles when not disturbed (e.g. cutting, ripping, etc.). Per the manufactures testing, OC Thermafiber is safe to handle in most conditions without protective gear. With that said, we always wrap both the front and back of all of our acoustic panels to ensure they are safe in any setting.
@@MusicCityAcoustics Yes, you wrap it with ACOUSTICALLY TRANSPARENT fabric to let the sound through. Said fabric can't and won't stop the particles from becoming airborne (yes it does that, even a totally undisturbed panel will fill the air of a room with particles; shine a black light anywhere rockwool is used that way, and it looks as if it's snowing). This poison is insulation, meant to be used behind walls and celings, where the particles can't reach your lungs. Fucking new asbestos. USE COTTON acoustic batts INSTEAD ! Same or better results, a little heavier, but harmless to breath.
Yes, they wrap it with ACOUSTICALLY TRANSPARENT fabric to let the sound through. Said fabric can't and won't stop the particles from becoming airborne (yes it does that, even a totally undisturbed panel will fill the air of a room with particles; shine a black light anywhere rockwool is used that way, and it looks as if it's snowing). This poison is insulation, meant to be used behind walls and celings, where the particles can't reach your lungs. Fucking new asbestos. USE COTTON acoustic batts INSTEAD ! Same or better results, a little heavier, but harmless to breath.
Hi, Thank you for the great video. Can I ask what thickness of plywood you are using for the main part of the frame. I know that the bracing piece is 1/2 inch but the thickness of the main elements looks to be bigger what is it? Thank you
I have been asked to make some art to 'beautify' panels for restaurant settings. I do paper art. Would adding that to the front of any acoustic absorbing material decrease its effectiveness? The noise absorption they want is for talking from all customers and kitchen type noise. I am open to ideas and instruction - thanks so much.
Make them yourself way cheaper . use roxul safe-n- sound and landscape fabric for backing and jute or burlap of the exposed fabric . I built 24 4x2 for under 500$ or less
@@phinn9823 it’s not really available anymore. Covid supply problems? Lowe’s (online, NOT my local store) will sell me three bags minimum of 24” x 48” x 3” rock wool safe n sound. I need one bag to make four 2’ x 6’ gobos. I do not need three bags. Even the Rockwool company cannot find a source fir me. Nobody has any explanations. Frustrating to watch all these recent RUclips videos making Rockwool panels.
@@b1j I just went with a store I had here in my town (Menards) They didn't have the rockwool brand or 2 x 4 batts. But I didn't manage to get a 10 pack of 16" x 4' batts. I'm just going to work with what I can get at this point. Thanks for your reply, man.
I plan to build some corner bass traps. Commercial corner bass traps are often triangular or round; is it OK to make them Square? Say, 40 by 40 by 120 cm?
Hi Carlito! There are several ways the panels can be installed. We have install guides on our website as well as hardware kits. Check out the install guides here. www.musiccityacoustics.com We also have a video on our website showing how to install them with french cleats. Cheers!
Hi Rob, we have a few panels in there but yes you're right, we could probably use a few more. Check out the other video we did with Adam Audio and you'll see where it all goes! Cheers!
Does anyone know what kind/brand of backing fabric is recommended? Something to keep the minerals inside the panel while still being acoustically transparent and inexpensive.
I’m making an acoustic insulated dog crate and I want to use a velvet fabric lining. Would it work or is there a specific type of fabric that has the best result?
Hi Jeroen, for a dog crate I think you can use any fabric that is tough enough to withstand the demands of a dog and obviously safe for them to be around. This is outside of our area of expertise so I can't make any specific recommendations.
Would there be any downside using wood glue on the parts you used the nail gun on? I make more of a triple triangle but with the mounting and spacing from apart it looks like artsy rectangle with a little wall showing through. I’ve found no difference between using full rectangles vs the triangular rectangle. Only product I found to work better are the thick blankets
Wood glue works great! and no toxic fumes. Sometimes finish nails can back out, but usually don't since the fabric is holding them. I use small headed deck screws predrilled or countersink screws. Turns out wood glue is just as strong on end grain as face grain joints (as strong as the wood). I always thought the opposite.
wouldn’t it be better to have the frame flipped the other way and put the backing fabric in first, so it’s not covering the limber at the back. this way you can also use a support bar as a french cleat.
I’m making my own right now for music production! I use wood fibre with 50.2 kg per square meter. Is 45mm enough in thickness? 122cm x 55cm in dimensions
what type of insulation? was trying to figure out thickness of each. I know you mentioned 1x3s, then 3/4 off for backer, leaving 1 3/4". Buy I see 2 layers of insulation and am not familiar with an insulation that' s only 5/8" thick. Great vid though, thank you for the detailed advice!
Hi Big Zul, the panels come with french cleats for wall mounting. We have a video on our channel showing how to install them. If you'd like a little more info email us through our website and I can send you install guides as well. Cheers!
Hey! It depends on whether they are being installed on a wall, corner, or ceiling and whether they will be flush mounted or with an air gap but for the most part on walls, we use French Cleats. We have a video on our channel showing how to install panels with the included hardware. If you'd like an install guide, I can also email ours. Reach out to us through our website!
I was looking for a direct reference from someone who's livelihood was making sound panels rather than amateur tutorials who might not know the intricacies of the construction. Biggest thing I see is that there's an airgap between the insulation and the front fabric, which I didn't hear mentioned in any of the videos. There's also some dead space on the back from the way the frame is constructed, which may help trap some extra sound, Everything else seems fairly straightforward - light wood frame with insulation and a fabric cover. Now if I can find a professional bass trap construction video...
If the rock wool I’m using is 3” thick, what should be the exact width of the wood? I originally thought the rock wool I ordered was 4” thick, so I cut the wood 5”. Is that too much space? If so, should I add an extra inch of rock wool in the frame?
Performance is improved when there is air space behind the panels. It is often recommended to just hang the panels from the wall no more than 1/2 the depth of the insulation. Air is cheaper than Rockwool, I would just put the 4” bats in the frame you have.
If anyone has ever taught you how to make a bed properly, the folds are essentially the same as when you tuck your flat sheet under the end of your mattress. Or, like gift-wrapping the ends on a square box.
Hi Allen and thanks! Our standard fabric is FR-DMD Acoustic Fabric. Creating a smooth look can be accomplished with just about any fabric as long it is pulled tightly and straightly during the wrapping process. Avoid, cheaper fabrics though as over time the stitching will loosen and the fabric will start to wrinkle and sag.
The important thing about fabric is that it is transparent to sound. To be sure you can do the following, take the fabric to your mouth and blow, if the air flows freely that fabric is optimal. Flannel or "Jersey" fabrics can work well.
Why not just build the panels the exact same size of the rockwool so you don't have to cut the rock wool and waste that 10%? Eliminate an entire step and not put any particles airborne. Great video BTW, amazing to show your exact process.
Why not stamping the white fabric at the end, and doing it over the blue fabric with it being folder over ? I feel it would create a nicer finish, and provide maybe a little bit more padding for the panel when on the wall.
Acoustic panels are very expensive, but when you see all the specifications they have to meet and I'd imagine even certifications, then you realise there is more to the cost than just labor and materials. Also, for architectural purposes, a certain level of quality and service is expected. For home though, I'd just make them myself
@@tommasobuzza1943 How do you know it's toxic? Could you pleace send a link to read about? I asked them(rockwool)on their website but they did't replied
@@hiiishrhl6553 from what I have read, at the very least mineral wool can be expelled by the lungs versus fiberglass. I would say a global Canadian mineral wool company would not put something that is seriously dangerous in their mineral wool. Maybe glues that hold the fiber into shape but still probably less toxic than walking in the average city that has cars? and I would say after some time any chemicals off gas. Similar to most varnishes etc which become food safe after curing.
Today we're back with Music City Acoustics to talk about how they build their acoustic panels 👊 What is your next DIY studio project? Be sure to check out the last video we did with Music City Acoustics all about common questions when it comes to studio acoustics ruclips.net/video/0uq7CJE_gW0/видео.html
I dont mean to be so off topic but does someone know a method to get back into an Instagram account?
I stupidly lost my account password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me.
@Kyler Benedict Instablaster :)
@Royce Johnny i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im in the hacking process atm.
Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
@Royce Johnny It did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. I am so happy:D
Thanks so much, you saved my ass :D
@Kyler Benedict Glad I could help :)
wow, so this PRO is much more simple than most of the DIY home videos :D
Looks very similar to the DIY videos I’ve seen
Thanks for uploading this video, I've made some great panels thanks to these instructions!
Wouldn't it be simpler to make the frame slightly larger so the insulation would not have to be cut at all?
Hi RJB, on a small scale yes it would be. However, when making panels on a larger scale there are a couple of reasons making the frames larger is not the best option. 1. When building the frames, we would have a ton of wood waste. With the dimensions of our frames, we have almost zero wood waste. The mineral wool is made of 70% recycled materials, so while it is unfortunate we can not use all of it, the waste doesn't have the same environmental impact. 2. If we were to make the frames larger, they would be 49.5"x25.5" making them significantly harder and more expensive to ship to our customers. Hope this clarifies.
@@MusicCityAcoustics cool man good to know
@@MusicCityAcoustics
Makes sense.
I have been enlightened!
@@MusicCityAcoustics where do you guys get the fabric? Here in Portugal I cant find a neutral sound fabric =\
@@MusicCityAcoustics I was wondering about the approach too, and it makes perfect sense.
But that creates next question: can't wool offcuts be squished down in some mesh tube (wrapped in cloth again) to make some kind of low cost bass trap? Or would it be to much work for the potential turnup?
The template is the game changer.
For anyone wondering about the nail-gun, you don't need one. If you want to make an uber good looking one that offers slightly better performance in the low end, here's what I've done:
Get a $20 pocket-hole jig and some Tight Bond II wood glue. Pocket hole screws aren't strong but they'll hold it together for the glue to dry. That particular glue is stronger than wood itself, also join the short pieces to the face of the long ones. The benefit of this method is it lets you keep the joinery on the inside with no visible screws or nails on the outside, and you can apply wood finish to the outside frame which looks really nice. The other caveat is if you use plywood you have exposed edges which require iron-on laminate strips ("edge banding") before finishing, and the whole process can take days instead of hours. The edge banding doesn't take very long and makes the cheap plywood look solid wood, you just gotta be patient cutting it off with a utlity knife.
I also use a 3" hole-saw that attaches to a drill and spaced out 8 holes in the long sides and 4 in the short. When you factor in the *hole-cutting + sanding, + laminate + wood conditioner + wood stain and clear, coats* .... it's a. lot of work.
The next issue is you need to fasten the fabric to the inside of the frame in order to keep the outside stained wood visible. This requires cutting some thin wood slightly shorter than the outer frame and using it to pinch the fabric up against the inside edges, flush with the outer face of the panel. This was by far the most confusing part for me at first, but when you see a white fabric pop through the holes of a dark wood stained wood on the outside -- it seems worth it. Especially that moment you hang 10 ten of them. They'll be night and day prettier than the bare minimum with slightly better bass absorption because of the holes.
Let us see some photos! Sounds awesome!!
So enjoy the beautiful wood while you develop small cellung cancer.
3/4” isn’t a lot for a screw to bite into.
@@trevorhardy3544 It's plenty for pocket holes if you do a proper but joint with them.
@@trevorhardy3544 Yeah daft idea, just screw through face grain into end grain and it'll be solid. Cover with your material. The end.
You guys come up with amazing videos. I see that the fabric they use is very elastic, which gives great overall look. For not so elastic materials I would not start from the corners when stapling but rather go from mid to sides and go around the panel frame just as you would tighten screws on your wheels. This is what I was given as an advice from a carpenter and with the panels I made it turned out amazing. Keep up the amazing work, love your videos!!
We're so happy you've found these videos helpful... thanks for watching! Great input as well from your experience building your panels 👍
Our standard fabric is quite stretchy but we also commonly use fabric from Guilford of Maine that has little to no stretch. The same wrapping technique works great for those fabrics as well. There is a tone of ways this can be done, so this is definitely just one option.
@@MusicCityAcoustics Thanks, that's good to know! You guys do an amazing job ;)
@@laurabrown5527 cringe
@@MusicCityAcoustics what fabrics do you use/recommend? I'm considering making some panels and getting the fabric custom printed.
There is just something about a woodwork studio. Great job!
I make the frame 3 inches thick and put a Sonopan panel at the back for to treat another level of frequencies. It works really well.
I've been building my own panels for years!
Good video👍
simple and simple😉
I have optimized it with a perforated wooden plate 3mm thick with hundreds of small holes in between. The diameter of the holes determines the degree of absorption by the panel, the larger the holes, the more broadband is absorbed. Broadband usually means down to about 250h.
You can do this if you don't want to process all frequencies so that a part is absorbed and a part is reflected. It can also be rounded off slightly for a slight diffusion so that it is scattered back into the room! 😉 Very simple but effective!
It's easy to know that basses cannot be absorbed so too thin! need more material, respectiv thicker panals! this is good for mid to hi absorption !! As shown in the video. About 3.5cm are hi-mid, mid to low 35cm and from 100heart down to 20heart lowend up to 350cm! One would have to insulate
This is roughly the formula because a sinus wave up to 12 meters long is generated in the bass wave. depends on the frequency ..
Have fun building it yourself! 👍😉
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge! :)
What insulation do you use?
@@seanhayesmusic44 Thermo hemp or mineral wool is both good. With thermal hemp the tightness is better and no harmful substances in it 100% of course up to 90% it consists of hemp barrels and non-flammable! 😉
I checked their website - they have broadband panels that are 4.5" deep, and bass traps at 6.5" deep- but you're absolutely right.
Funny story - yesterday one of the dense wool panels I had bought (and hate) fell off the ceiling (they're just attached using 3M stickies right now). I re-measured in that part of the room and found there's a bass issue in that corner at something like 60 hz. What makes it worse is that there's about a 2' chamber between that and a bookshelf that is apparently literally shaking the wall in that one part of the room. I was only using a 1.5" deep high-mid panel there which does nothing for those frequencies for sure!
@@mosermichael4404 where do you get thermo hemp?
Great video, thank you! Just a quick question: is Recycled Denim a good/equal option?
Thank you
I´ve always wondered if the fabric is enough to keep the rockwool particles from the room air or should you wrap the inside material in plastic for example? Especially for bedroom studios where you might sleep and spend a lot of time in. Thanks for a great video!
It depends. If it's a bass trap you're building, plastic is fine as bass freqs will pass through the plastic. However, if it's broadband absorption, the plastic will reflect the high-mid and high freqs, which defeats the purpose of it.
What you can do, is use several layers of breathable material (like muslin) as your first and maybe even second layer, before you wrap with the finish fabric. Another great material is Dacron (polyester backing). One or two inches of Dacron will ensure very few fibres escape and it also has the benefit of having great acoustical properties for sound absorption.
Hi Ville, most fabrics work quite well to keep the mineral wool in the panels and not in your room. It also helps that once a panel is made there is nothing to disturb the mineral wool (e.g. cutting, ripping, tearing, etc) so very few if any particles would shed from it, even if it were left uncovered. With that said, it is important not to use any fabric that has a very loose fabric weave. Burlap is an example of a fabric commonly used for panels that does not work well for this.
As mentioned above, wrapping panels in plastic would not be advisable in most bedroom applications as it will cause the panels to be reflective in the high frequencies.
Use acoustic cotton batts instead; harmless and equally effective. Rockwool is the new asbestos, not meant to be exposed like that. and only plastic can't contain the tiny particles. Plastic negates the material's absorption properties in the mid and hi frequencies.
@@MusicCityAcoustics No acoustically tranparent fabric can't prevent the particles from coming through it. And they'll shed even when ¨undisturbed¨. Stop using mineral insulation in the fucking open where people can breathe it; use recycled cotton batts instead !
spraying the mineral-wool slabs with a diluted PVA glue helps to keep fibre shedding down
Nice and very understanding,
is there any specific requirment for the backing fabric? like,airflow or somthing,is it pointless if i use Polypropylene material as backing fabric?
Acoustic Panels controls echo's but there is another role of acoustic curtains in same way.
Soundproof-Curtains.me
Hi Adam Audio ! Isn't mineral wool dangerous for the health of the person breathing inside the studio ?
Thanks.
Thats also my question 😕
No, mineral wool in special textile, special cloth dont missed micro dispersion, it's not going outside box. Most studios have this panels. But if you make like this. Be careful, micro dispersion mineral wool in your lungs, create CANCER in 5 years breathing this.
Cellulose Fibre manufactured from recycled newspapers and also sheepswool is good natural options.
To be fair I'm not sure much wool would ever be escaping the box. It's not like there will be much air current or disruption in general when indoors that might cause the wool to come out of the box.
Nice video. Concise and to the point. Great work.
Thank you for watching! Glad you liked it.
Excellent video! You don't specify the frequency range for the panel you built. All rooms have bass issues. You must start at the low end and solve the problem from 25 Hz to 110 Hz. How thick of a panel like yours would do the trick? Thanks 👍!
Ned Shneebly is looking great these days. Love the new hair.
💀💀💀💀💀
Actually it's Shnayblaay
@@squoblat heheheee thank u for that
One of the Best Ideas of SoundProofing is "SoundProof Curtains" That Stops Outside Noise by 80% (25 Db) Tested. Check Here: livesoundproof.com/best-soundproof-curtains/
@@LauraBrown-hg2ry if you want soundproof curtains, get the PVC overlapping strip curtains in the biggest thickness you can handle. You'll drop way more than 25db, but they will be fixed (rather than sliding), you get a decent air seal if you set them up right and it keeps the heat in.
What fabric did you use? Are some better than others at maintaining the fibres from escaping?
Would like to know too
Looks like poly poplin. You can install a thin layer of dacron in front of fiberglass or mineral wool insulation if you want to be safe
Guilford of Maine is what most companies use. Expensive but doesn't stretch and droop over time. Duckcloth is also popular and roughly half the price
probably won’t tell you because rather than using youtube to share knowledge, some people want to make money as much as possible, to the point where they won’t tell you something like this, so you’ll by their product.
Which insulation is better? Mineral wool or fiberglass? Thank you.
Thats why i love @adamaudio
Thanks Louis! We love our audience 👍
Any advice? .... got a small untreated room, having major issues around 140Hz cause of the low ceiling (about 7 feet high). Gonna get some wall panels and clouds made. Should I make 5cm thick panels with 5cm gaps behind them or make them 10cm and hang against the walls? Also, what's the best density I should get? Note, with the clouds I can also make them 10cm and hang them with a 10cm gap, but the walls are an issue.
Wouldn't it be loosing fibers/dust with fabric cover only? Some people recommend one layer of pallet strach/film and then putting into frame to wrap with fabric. I'm onto doing my second set of panels and was wandering about that. Thank you for the video.
Cellulose Fibre manufactured from recycled newspapers and also sheepswool is good natural options.
I was thinking the same thing. Also figure out an optimum size to cut the fabric so it doesn't require additional trimming as well
What gauge and length of brad nails are you using?
great job ! but how do you hang it and let a space with the wall ? french cleat ?
Thank you for the video. Please take notice that thr hardest part was glossed over amd not shown.... the corners. I figured it out eventually but that's kinda shady
What's your stance on using a thin plastic back to wrap the wool? The idea is to make sure the fibers don't get into the air but mainly: If you use a thinner plate but dense material that'll have difficulties dampening lower frequencies but is excellent for higher frequencies, some of the higher frequencies will get reflected by the plastic making for an overall flatter response. Of course at the expense of some performance but I'd rather have weaker dapening on the highs than the room majorly lacking in highs because now the lows can overpower the lacking highs.
If you find you are losing too much the very high end wrapping with the thinnest plastic you can find is great. Think the thickness of a dry cleaning bag; that way it only bounces back the very high end but absorbs most everything else. I have seen people doing this in panel building. In fact in my studio I made frames on my concrete wall to fit these very mineral wool boards and then covered with Burlap fabric and then added VG Douglas fir 3/4" boards with about 4" gaps in between(can be adjusted depending on dampening required) so it looks nice but also reflects back some higher end. On softer woods I use minimal varnish wiped on tight just enough so I can clean the boards and not overcoat the wood and make it sound too harsh. You can hear the difference in sound before and after 3 coats of varnish on a wood floor in a room so I would assume the same applies to wood in studios depending on the density of the wood used.
@@jonwikan3986 How would you describe the sound difference between pre and post varnish?
@@inmemoryofin good question. You know when you walk into a new house and it echos and there is a lot of reverb? but then you move furniture into the room and things dampen up? Kind of like that but maybe more subtle but noticeable. I am talking 100 year old Douglas fir floors, a really soft wood that absorbs quite a bit of sound without a hard as heck protective varnish.
Cellulose Fibre manufactured from recycled newspapers and also sheepswool is good natural options.
LOVING the template !!!!
THanks - Can you tell me why some people hang them like pictures with big gaps between and others cover every inch of their wall with accoustic panels?
I’m practically first time building, anything really but, some in my basement right now and realize how much a friggin table comes in handy. My back after finishing one iyiyiyeeeeeee
Do you use two different densities of rockwool ?
Whats that white fabric called?
Why not make the panels to fit the the mineral wool as purchased, getting rid of the step of cutting them down to size? Is that rigid comfort board 80 by chance?
I might have missed something. Is there a reason why the frames aren't just made to perfectly fit a piece of insulation? That would save a step for every panel.
Probably so they can minimize lumber waste? That's all I can think of...
@romancecoffeeroaster That's actually a pretty valid reason, thanks.
This is just too cool! I love DIY videos like this! What would be cool is an in-between. I'd love to just purchase the template used in the video to make the frame! Not fully DIY, but not fully constructed, just a time saver ;)
This is an excellent guide. So glad I found this video before building my own panels.
Informative!
Thank you so much for watching!
Very cool
neat job! thanks for this video
Thank you for watching, Lucas! 😍🔥
I bought some borgaline fabric, it's some form of cotton? Would this be suitable to cover the panels with?
I watched it though. Haven't learned all that much new here. Making these panels is a true DIY job -- just get some foam board or mineral wool piece with a a hard backing, and staple some fabric onto it. Putting them in a wood frame makes the result fancier.
Great suggestion! If you want a bunch of mineral wool fibers floating around in your studio that you will enviably end up breathing in. I think the the frame helps contain everything better.
You need an open cell foam, can't use closed cell for sound absorbing panels.
And you can't have any hard backing either, that's why you need the wood frame.
In a commercial room, roughly 30 by 50 feet square, and a 10 feet ceiling, would these work as well? And how far apart would we hang them?
When hanging vertical, Is it better to have the horizontal pieces longer or the vertical pieces longer for structural stability of the frame? In this video he does vertical pieces longer overlapping the horizontal pieces. Is there a reason for this?
Great video, thank you.
What density rockwool do you use? My local supplier in South Africa has 60, 80, 100, 120 and 160kg/m3 available.
Thank you!
I think approximate 45-60 kg/m³, but for bass traps or small room you need over 100 kg/m³. To catch low frequencies.
Not too much, it will be like solid wall, and mirroring sound.
Great to see a full build of one of these panels. How do you then mount these on a wall? Just a picture wire across the back, hung up on picture hooks, or is there a better way? Cheers
They can be hung with a single French cleat on the back, in addition to the method you described. The downside to this is that a spacer is necessary to include the necessary air gap. I also have a few hung from the ceiling, connected at the top of the panel with two hooks. If hanging, using small turnbuckles between the hooks and rope/chain allows them to be hang straight with a level. Some folks put them on easel stands as an alternative to hanging.
@@inmemoryofin that's very useful. Thanks!
what stops the itchy material from passing through the fabric?
Great video!
insulation made of?
where to buy it or how to made that?
how are u adam what is the name of fabric u use in those panels
are they cotton 100%?
What is the white fabric called? Where can I buy?
This is awesome. No glue = No fumes. I've tried putting my own together and they didn't turn out nearly this well. What really kills me is that these will likely do a much better job than the craptastic panels I got from Amazon for about the same price. I just checked - the broadband panels are way better.
I'll be calling (or stopping by if possible) soon I think since they're right here in Nashville.
Thanks for this run-thru!
That's so awesome! Those guys are great, so we know they'll be more than happy to help you out. Thanks for watching, D.J. 👍
Hi D.J. we'd love to help you out with your room. Reach out to us whenever you're ready!
Wood glue doesn't have fumes. Were you gluing cheap foam panels to your wall?
What kind of glue are you using? Wood glue doesn’t have fumes and in fact Titebond 3 is food safe.
whats the density of the rock wool? 40kg/m3 or 80 or 100?
Anybody else having a hell of time tracking down single packs of rockwool? Any suggestions for best places to order a pack of 8 batts? I'm shooting for 3x48x24.
I get them at Home Creepo in 1.5 inch and double up if needed. I believe brand is Rockwool(formerly Roxul) Comfort board 60 and there is a 2 inch version as well. *Note: not all Home Depots carry this but it can certainly be ordered. Usually $50-60 for a pack of them. 6 or 8 depending on thickness.
Hoping you can help me , can we use non-rigid insulation. Here in NZ we can get fiberglass insulation,but its not in rigid boards. I can stuff it as compact as possible though, would that work?
Hi Chantelle, you can absolutely use nonrigid insulation. For acoustic panels that are 2" to 6" deep, the performance won't be quite as effective but they will still work really well! For really deep bass traps this can actually be beneficial just make sure not to compact it down! Whatever product you end up using, it should be in its original state. Compressing fluffy insulation actually makes its performance worse.
@@MusicCityAcoustics thank you so much for the reply! So helpful
Amazing video! Especially love your tempalte table.
However....
I am to improve the nursery for my son and i wanted to hang a few panels in there to improve the reverb. As many people are mentioning there could potentially be some health issues with wrapping mineral wool in nothing but a thin peace of cloth.?
Also giving this is for my son, the panels are tp be hung fairly low in order to catch the direct reflections of his mouth and toys and therefore it is to be expected that these panels will be hit, tapped, get in contact with toys or in other way be handled a tad rough.
In general theres 2 questions.
- Is it safe with mineral wool or other insulation alike, or what other material would you recommend (considering the panels will not be left in peace)
- How/What can you do to improve the sustainability of the panel with minimal cost of effect?
No mineral wool should be used in nursery, especial with possibility of contact.
Hey, just got a question .
There are articles about Rockwool that there are risks of getting lung disease and cancer for using it in door... What do you think ?
Hi Emad, with both mineralwool and fiberglass products it is important to protect your lungs and skin when working with the material. In our experience, neither product will shed particles when not disturbed (e.g. cutting, ripping, etc.). Per the manufactures testing, OC Thermafiber is safe to handle in most conditions without protective gear. With that said, we always wrap both the front and back of all of our acoustic panels to ensure they are safe in any setting.
@@MusicCityAcoustics Yes, you wrap it with ACOUSTICALLY TRANSPARENT fabric to let the sound through. Said fabric can't and won't stop the particles from becoming airborne (yes it does that, even a totally undisturbed panel will fill the air of a room with particles; shine a black light anywhere rockwool is used that way, and it looks as if it's snowing). This poison is insulation, meant to be used behind walls and celings, where the particles can't reach your lungs. Fucking new asbestos. USE COTTON acoustic batts INSTEAD ! Same or better results, a little heavier, but harmless to breath.
Yes, they wrap it with ACOUSTICALLY TRANSPARENT fabric to let the sound through. Said fabric can't and won't stop the particles from becoming airborne (yes it does that, even a totally undisturbed panel will fill the air of a room with particles; shine a black light anywhere rockwool is used that way, and it looks as if it's snowing). This poison is insulation, meant to be used behind walls and celings, where the particles can't reach your lungs. Fucking new asbestos. USE COTTON acoustic batts INSTEAD ! Same or better results, a little heavier, but harmless to breath.
Use cotton insolation from ats acoustics or ultra touch
Oldestpunk Inargentina love that we are on the same wavelength
Hi,
Thank you for the great video.
Can I ask what thickness of plywood you are using for the main part of the frame. I know that the bracing piece is 1/2 inch but the thickness of the main elements looks to be bigger what is it?
Thank you
It's 1"x3"x8' furring strips
Fantastic video! I am wondering what kind of staples you are using. Is that a crown stapler?
What insulation material is that?
I have been asked to make some art to 'beautify' panels for restaurant settings. I do paper art. Would adding that to the front of any acoustic absorbing material decrease its effectiveness? The noise absorption they want is for talking from all customers and kitchen type noise. I am open to ideas and instruction - thanks so much.
Most likely yes. If you can find a breathable fabric like some light cotton and draw on there, that would be your best bet.
What type of wood are you using? Pine?
Hi there, we have a disagreement here; is all the frame made of plywood or only the center piece?
Looks like it.
Make them yourself way cheaper . use roxul safe-n- sound and landscape fabric for backing and jute or burlap of the exposed fabric . I built 24 4x2 for under 500$ or less
I screen shot this comment I liked it so much. About to try and build my own.
Except I can't seem to find this brand of mineral wool anywheerrrreeee
@@phinn9823 it’s not really available anymore. Covid supply problems? Lowe’s (online, NOT my local store) will sell me three bags minimum of 24” x 48” x 3” rock wool safe n sound. I need one bag to make four 2’ x 6’ gobos. I do not need three bags. Even the Rockwool company cannot find a source fir me. Nobody has any explanations. Frustrating to watch all these recent RUclips videos making Rockwool panels.
My estimate is about $60 per panel for four 2’ x 6’ gobos. Probably goes down to about $55 each if I use plywood or MDF.
@@b1j I just went with a store I had here in my town (Menards)
They didn't have the rockwool brand or 2 x 4 batts. But I didn't manage to get a 10 pack of 16" x 4' batts. I'm just going to work with what I can get at this point. Thanks for your reply, man.
Cant see, but are you stapling to the insulation?
I want to know why the frame wasn't just made a bit bigger so you don't have to cut the insulation?
I plan to build some corner bass traps. Commercial corner bass traps are often triangular or round; is it OK to make them
Square? Say, 40 by 40 by 120 cm?
How thick is the rockwool you use?
So how do you hook it up onto the wall, is there a extra piece that hangs it up onto the wall or do you just use the two sided duck tape ?
Hi Carlito! There are several ways the panels can be installed. We have install guides on our website as well as hardware kits. Check out the install guides here. www.musiccityacoustics.com We also have a video on our website showing how to install them with french cleats. Cheers!
There’s a certain irony to them not having any acoustic treatment in their workshop
That aside, this takes a lot of the guesswork out of it! Thx!
Yes, there is. 9:25
That's what I thought at the very beginning xD
Definitely some panels on the long wall...
Hi Rob, we have a few panels in there but yes you're right, we could probably use a few more. Check out the other video we did with Adam Audio and you'll see where it all goes! Cheers!
I guess, but it's a woodworking shop, not a recording studio...
wondering how much the materials used adds up to?
what is the type of mineral wool they use? or brand?
Does anyone know what kind/brand of backing fabric is recommended? Something to keep the minerals inside the panel while still being acoustically transparent and inexpensive.
I’m making an acoustic insulated dog crate and I want to use a velvet fabric lining. Would it work or is there a specific type of fabric that has the best result?
Hi Jeroen, for a dog crate I think you can use any fabric that is tough enough to withstand the demands of a dog and obviously safe for them to be around. This is outside of our area of expertise so I can't make any specific recommendations.
If it works for a dog it should work for a parrot too right?
Would there be any downside using wood glue on the parts you used the nail gun on? I make more of a triple triangle but with the mounting and spacing from apart it looks like artsy rectangle with a little wall showing through. I’ve found no difference between using full rectangles vs the triangular rectangle. Only product I found to work better are the thick blankets
Wood glue works great! and no toxic fumes. Sometimes finish nails can back out, but usually don't since the fabric is holding them. I use small headed deck screws predrilled or countersink screws. Turns out wood glue is just as strong on end grain as face grain joints (as strong as the wood). I always thought the opposite.
wouldn’t it be better to have the frame flipped the other way and put the backing fabric in first, so it’s not covering the limber at the back. this way you can also use a support bar as a french cleat.
How do you intall them w/o fasteners showing?
I’m making my own right now for music production! I use wood fibre with 50.2 kg per square meter. Is 45mm enough in thickness? 122cm x 55cm in dimensions
Wish you would have showed us more detain on folding the corners
what is the name of the installation being used for the sound panel
which wood board is used to make the frames?
Hi! We use Baltic Birch Plywood for all of our products.
@@grahamwaks3163 Ooo Thank you sir
what type of insulation? was trying to figure out thickness of each. I know you mentioned 1x3s, then 3/4 off for backer, leaving 1 3/4". Buy I see 2 layers of insulation and am not familiar with an insulation that' s only 5/8" thick. Great vid though, thank you for the detailed advice!
What about this rock-wool particles flying though the fabric and in our lungs? Is there any research on that?
That was a long backing track!
@@laurabrown5527 cringe
4 bar loop
Acoustic Panels controls echo's but there is another role of acoustic curtains in same way.
Soundproof-Curtains.me
Can anyone tell the song title? Interesting video about building the panels.
is it better to risk irritation from the insulation or gloves getting tangled in the blade?
what is the backing/white fabric called?
Is that comfortboard you’re using? If so is it 40, 60 or 80?
Looks Good! just wondering how to hang this panel? any specific bracket?
Hi Big Zul, the panels come with french cleats for wall mounting. We have a video on our channel showing how to install them. If you'd like a little more info email us through our website and I can send you install guides as well. Cheers!
We call them flush mount brackets in the UK I don't know what you guys call them ! 👍
what do you guys use to hang up the panels ?
Hey! It depends on whether they are being installed on a wall, corner, or ceiling and whether they will be flush mounted or with an air gap but for the most part on walls, we use French Cleats. We have a video on our channel showing how to install panels with the included hardware. If you'd like an install guide, I can also email ours. Reach out to us through our website!
I was looking for a direct reference from someone who's livelihood was making sound panels rather than amateur tutorials who might not know the intricacies of the construction. Biggest thing I see is that there's an airgap between the insulation and the front fabric, which I didn't hear mentioned in any of the videos. There's also some dead space on the back from the way the frame is constructed, which may help trap some extra sound, Everything else seems fairly straightforward - light wood frame with insulation and a fabric cover. Now if I can find a professional bass trap construction video...
What are the insulation in this?
If the rock wool I’m using is 3” thick, what should be the exact width of the wood? I originally thought the rock wool I ordered was 4” thick, so I cut the wood 5”. Is that too much space? If so, should I add an extra inch of rock wool in the frame?
Performance is improved when there is air space behind the panels. It is often recommended to just hang the panels from the wall no more than 1/2 the depth of the insulation. Air is cheaper than Rockwool, I would just put the 4” bats in the frame you have.
wrapping the corner material looks the hardest. Shame the video didn't really show that part carefully.
10:41 shows that quite well?
If anyone has ever taught you how to make a bed properly, the folds are essentially the same as when you tuck your flat sheet under the end of your mattress. Or, like gift-wrapping the ends on a square box.
Sweet!
why did you choose plywood strips instead of cheap dimensional lumber, like 1x4s?
wow!!
Great video. What kind of fabrics do you use for front panel? I really like the smooth and winkel free like you guys use.
Hi Allen and thanks! Our standard fabric is FR-DMD Acoustic Fabric. Creating a smooth look can be accomplished with just about any fabric as long it is pulled tightly and straightly during the wrapping process. Avoid, cheaper fabrics though as over time the stitching will loosen and the fabric will start to wrinkle and sag.
The important thing about fabric is that it is transparent to sound. To be sure you can do the following, take the fabric to your mouth and blow, if the air flows freely that fabric is optimal. Flannel or "Jersey" fabrics can work well.
@@publiogarcia7529 thank you for explaining, what of 100% cotton material?
Why not just build the panels the exact same size of the rockwool so you don't have to cut the rock wool and waste that 10%?
Eliminate an entire step and not put any particles airborne. Great video BTW, amazing to show your exact process.
Why not stamping the white fabric at the end, and doing it over the blue fabric with it being folder over ? I feel it would create a nicer finish, and provide maybe a little bit more padding for the panel when on the wall.
Acoustic panels are very expensive, but when you see all the specifications they have to meet and I'd imagine even certifications, then you realise there is more to the cost than just labor and materials.
Also, for architectural purposes, a certain level of quality and service is expected.
For home though, I'd just make them myself
You know i am concerned about the mineral wool, they sta it's toxic. In your experience do you know of fabric Is enough to insulate It?
@@tommasobuzza1943 How do you know it's toxic? Could you pleace send a link to read about? I asked them(rockwool)on their website but they did't replied
@@hiiishrhl6553 from what I have read, at the very least mineral wool can be expelled by the lungs versus fiberglass. I would say a global Canadian mineral wool company would not put something that is seriously dangerous in their mineral wool. Maybe glues that hold the fiber into shape but still probably less toxic than walking in the average city that has cars? and I would say after some time any chemicals off gas. Similar to most varnishes etc which become food safe after curing.
@@tommasobuzza1943 just use recycled fabric panels then