I don't think Sabins are metric. From an RT article:
http://www.realtraps.com/art_measure.htm
Not sure why they say that, because I can't confirm that anywhere else. From what I have found, one m^2 of totally absorbing material has a value of one metric Sabin, which keeps the units m^2 sabin. Now, if Real Traps is talking about finding the coefficient, then as long as the units cancel it doesn't matter...
A=sum(S * a)
So, A (sabines) = (Surface area of my carpt)(absorption coefficient of my carpet) + (surface area of my wall)(absorption coefficient of my wall) + (surface area of my doors)(absorption coefficient of the wood) + and so on and so on.
where:
A= Sabin absorption of the room
S= Surface area
a=absorption coefficient of the room
... but Sabin seems to be in m^2 everywhere I took, so if we use m^2 for the Sabins and then ft^2 for the surface area it will throw us off. A lot of places just say Sabin though, and don't specify
As far as the SPL drop/reduction, I kind of answered my own question sniffing around the journals database at work. The equation is:
SPL
listeningposition
SPL = SPL@Source + log[D/(4*Pi*r^2)] + (4/r)
where:
SPL = The estimated SPL at a given frequency in dB
SPL@Source = The SPL at the speakers in dB
D = Directivity coefficient (1 for a typical sweet spot, closer to walls is 2), unitless
R = Room Constant (m^2 sabine) .... the added room constant, which you use that formula on Real Traps website)
r = Distance to source (basically, the radius if your speakers were positioned in a circular fashion) in meters.
So to see how much a given set of treatments would help, I would do this for my untreated room and then again with the new room constant factoring the surface area of the fabric/panels.
Looks like if I took GIK's panel testing numbers, for example, at each frequency, I would set up a spreadsheet and it could estimate what the change would be.
That seems to only be for magnitude though, not sure how time factors in.
I haven't tried the formula yet, because I need to calculate my room's constant...which is kind of tedious, but may be interesting to compare a ETrap versus a GIK Bass Trap or something.
...
I'm left with more questions though... like, if surface area is the how the coefficients are determined, then is that why some of the foam traps have the triangles all over them? And if a panel is made with 45-deg triangles, what is the thickness? Is it the average depth to the wall? What about the distance normal to the triangles? That would be much deeper... I wonder if that's why the triangle bass traps are popular, because a triangle would maximize your surface area and depth.
Ah, another thing to play with for my system.
Just as I thought I was running out ....