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by abainbridge
2664 days ago
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I still don't understand your point. In the scenario in the article, you've got some noise coming down a pipe and the invention attenuates it. By "PVC pipes in the corner of a room", it seems like you are talking about a way to remove resonant frequencies from a room - as some folks do to improve the acoustics of a room for a hi-fi setup. In the scenario in the article, the noise is in a pipe, not in a room. |
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It wasn't a complaint to the invention itself, which is certainly promising for blocking sounds in ventilation while keeping airflow.
PVC pipes trap low frequency sound by eating up it's energy and since low frequencies penetrate solid objects, resonant sound is what people are most annoyed by and those are reproduced in corners of a room - which is a good target for PVC bass traps to cancel out the bass.
When it comes to high frequencies, they bounce easier, so it's more about building a "maze" of surfaces for the sound to bounce on until it looses it's energy, which seems to be exactly what they do in the article, they keep bouncing the waves backwards until they die out and it's quite clever.