
Glenn Kuras
Full Audioholic
You know if we could only "see" sound then it would make all of this stuff easier to understand. I remember when I did a lot of sailboat racing we would string several light weight 36 foot strings to the front of the boat during practice so we could better understand how the wind was reacting to the sails. It was incredible what you would learn. Which in return made you a better sailor. To bad we can not do that with sound. Or is there a way?Ethan Winer said:Vaughan,
> what I was finding hardest to come to grips with is the fact that insulation material in a wall can affect the wall-to-wall spacing vibrational frequencies <
Here's another way to look at it: A wall is not a single entity. It has thickness. Sound passes through the "skin" on one side, through the middle material, then to the skin on the other side. Since you (now) know that sound slows down as it passes through insulation, adding insulation inside the wall means sound gets to the other side later than it would have otherwise. So the outer skin is effectively farther away, thus lowering that dimension's mode frequency.
--Ethan
Glenn