Super_Paulie Posted October 27 Share Posted October 27 Evening. I've added 100mm acoustic wool (SuperGlass) between the joists between the ground and first floor. The ground floor has UFH but upstairs has rads, which I hope to never use. Question is, is the 100mm enough to balance out the sound absorption and "slight" heat transfer I require? Deck is 22mm, ceiling is standard 12.5mm. Id rather not hear the missus stomping around to the latest Taylor Swift rubbish, but I don't want a bedroom that is absolutely baltic either. Any thoughts? Banana for scale. 🍌 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted October 28 Share Posted October 28 I suspect that if you generally leave the doors open that will take care of warming the upstairs. Apart from the fact that I like Ms Swift I wonder if there’s a formula somewhere that calculates sound transmittance as a product of (joist depth x frequency of dance steps divided by insulation density (lumps per m3) minus floor nail length to the power of weight of dancer in kg). Such a formula might indicate that Slimming World membership is more cost effective than further insulation. Or maybe you could lighten up and join in the dancing. Hope that helps. 😉 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sparrowhawk Posted October 28 Share Posted October 28 10 hours ago, Super_Paulie said: Id rather not hear the missus stomping around to the latest Taylor Swift rubbish, but I don't want a bedroom that is absolutely baltic either. Any thoughts? There are two ways sound is transmitted through the floor: airborne sound and structure-borne sound. The insulation you've added takes care of airborne sound, so it will deaden the noise of Taylor Swift from above. However, it will do pretty much nothing to deaden your missus dancing around. To deal with that you'll need to add some kind of cushioning over the joists - a thick underlay if you're putting down carpet, or better decouple the floor deck from the joists (or the ceiling below from the joists) to reduce the sound transmission. Others here have more practical experience than I do - I've been focused on airborne sound transmission. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iceverge Posted October 28 Share Posted October 28 I'm not an expert either soso anyone who has a better practical understanding of it please enlighten me more. None the less, this is the internet so I'm going to present my opinion as fact regardless! To mitigate sound transmission. 1. Airpaths - lots of acoustic mastic at any joints and at the walls. Seal all gaps. 2. Reverberation - A layer of fluffy stuff just to stop the drum effect. The stuff you've done is fine. Infact any more will only add slightly more mass and risk increasing the coupling effect of the floors. 3. Impact noises - decouple the surfaces. Carpet, foam strips under floorboards, resilient bars downstairs. 4. Add Mass. Plasterboard, standard or soundbloc or OSB is the cheapest way. Upstairs or downstairs . The more kg the merrier. "Acoustic" insulation adds more mass than regular insulation but it's an expensive method of buying mass. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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