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In the Forum: Audio Discussions
In the Thread: Romy The Cat's new Listening Room
Post Subject: An environmental aspect of noise.Posted by Romy the Cat on: 5/31/2012
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 oxric wrote:
Your listening room probably needs to be heard to be fully appreciated but I am sure that in terms of ambient noise, good as it is, it could be better. You have these large doors opening on the outside and I have a feeling your house was built using usual american materials. I would hasard a guess that your room is fairly exposed to environmental noises of all sorts. Far from me be it to criticise, and i suffer even more of this problem as mu current listening room in France is at the front of the house leading directly onto the road, albeit that the walls are stone and about 80cm thick or so. It is just part and parcel of most listening rooms nowadays that they are not truly 'silent'. On the other hand, the solution pursued by this japanese audiophile is just too extreme to my taste and I would like the soundproofing of having solid earth around the main perimeter of the room but with an open part leading to a view over the surrounding countryside...and use properly specified sound proof glass, which would have to be triple glazed and built to 'PassivHaus' standards in any case.
The subject of noise and listening room enrolment is very interesting one. Of course we all want our listening rooms to be as quite as possible. I am not even taking about airplanes, cars, lawnmowers, dogs or the annoying kinds shot basketball, but also about refrigerators, wine coolers, regenerators, air conditioners, fans, dishwasher of the sounds of own family members. The question is - where to stop? One would run away from city to escape the emergency vehicle sirens and boom of the idling tracks and face the suburban noise of landscaping crews and scream of very annoying birds.
 
It is thru that in US today houses built from shit and from sound isolation perspective they are not even close to the older European masonry contraction. Still, I think the sound isolation is NOT the key. The solid masonry contraction has different sound itself and I think that this is more important than the isolation factor. I do not insist that solid masonry contraction is always better but it for sure sounds different then the cardboard walls…
 
The Cat

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