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Soundproofing Question Hi was just wondering if anyone had any general information about how to soundproof a bedroom by the door so noise can be reduced or not escape on the other end. Long story short my room has a door which connects to another hallway and a bedroom on the other side of this hallway but is considered really close to one another. My question is would it be possible to purchase some sort of product locally to reduce some noise by applying it to the door. Was google-ing some stuff earlier but didnt find it helpful Thanks |
You can replace your door with a solid wood door if you have a hollow one now. Also, if you have a gap under your door, you need to fill it with some sort of solid sweep. |
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I have a wooden door right now its pretty solid. But yes I have a small 1inch gap on the floor. I read up egg-cartons could work because sound bounces off. |
Egg cartons do work.. The difference in doors is the "hollow core" is HOLLOW, meaning the thickness is actually very slim because of the negative space inside the door. Getting a "solid core" wood door would mean that it would be solid wood through the door eliminating the negative space and blocking more noise coming through the door. You could also stick foam on the back of your door, instead of ugly egg cartons :p |
Get some door weather stripping for the bottom of the door. Something like this: TAGO | Adjustable Doorsweep Vinyl - White | Home Depot Canada second what type of noise are you trying to block? |
If it's just temporary you can use clothes/towels to block the gap on the bottom. :ifyouknow: |
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put a pillow over her face /thread |
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Ill check that product out thanks Quote:
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Hang a moving blanket in front of your door. Sound Blankets Producers Choice Sound Blankets Producers Choice BW +Grommets. Set of 6 VB-70G(6), Black Acoustic Pratt Retail Specialties, LLC | Moving Blanket 72 Inch x 80 Inch | Home Depot Canada For egg crate lyou want the bumpy facing you. Local place that carries it. http://www.foamshop.com/?loadpage=pr...ndproofing.php Any gaps in the door will let the sound out. |
^ question, could these products be put in laundry rooms or where the furnace, or even tank-less (on demand) water heaters are? or would it be flammable? |
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I would use a solid core door; Home Depot use to have unpainted versions on special fairly routinely, but I haven't looked recently. If you're willing to take a risk to do it on a budget: I think you could drill holes along the side of a door and fill it with low expansion expanding foam, it would probably take 5-6 cans. Just an idea, I take no responsibility for potentially fucked up doors. |
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OP, visit here and email the experts. SoundAway - Residential and Commercial Soundproofing |
Thanks for the replies / suggestions I've began the egg carton project, and will most likely get something to cover the gap on the bottom for now. Posted via RS Mobile |
we soundproofed a room in our house, used 4 layers of corkboard on every wall, ceiling aand floor. , staggered each layer, silicone in each and every gap, solid door with seals on all four sides, its now vibe proof and soundproof! |
Solis core doors are about $100 and if you take the existing door to a place like windsor plywood, the will mill and drill it to the existing specs, so you just re-hang it. That costs an extra $30 or so. If you are looking to limit sound through walls, they sell special drywall that is about $60/sheet and you use a special glue on the existing drywall and its supposed to cut sound by about 30-40%. That is all available at Lowe's. |
^^^ And we also used the soundproofing drywall on top of everything. |
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Acoustic drywall costs a fortune, I wouldn't ever consider using it outside a theater room. Anytime I've worked on a basement suite type deal, where the owners wanted soundproofing on a budget at the construction phase, I've suggested insulation, followed by resiliant channel, followed by donnaconna, followed by sheetrock. All that works out to be about a quarter of the costs of the drywall, offers fire stopping, resists sound transmission very near to equally as well as acoustic drywall, and the only real downside is an additional inch of ceiling height/wall thickness. |
ya my friend is using the insulating foam for sound proofing the wall between suites in his home |
Roxul Safe and Sound Insulation, Sound Rated insulation available at the home depot |
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Acoustic and thermal insulation are identical, they're different only in name. It's not necessary to pay a premium to purchase Roxel S&S or Owens Corning Quiet Zone acoustic rated insulation, stick to ordinary thermal rated insulation and you'll have more selection at better prices. I would also advise using good fiberglass like John Mansville unless code requires mineral wool, because the later has high formaldehyde content (7-8% by weight) which diffuses into the air you're breathing. If you're after fire stropping, use fire rated 5/8 sheet rock not mineral wool. |
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