Russell griffiths Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Stud wall between a bedroom and an en-suite bathroom. 90mm timber studs. insulate inbetween studs or double plasterboard both sides. this is a holiday lodge we have so the only noise will be hearing the wife dropping the kids off at school. I think bang for my buck double boarding is cheaper.
JohnMo Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 90mm studs 50mm dense mineral wool I used rock wool Flexi - zero issues and normal 12.5mm plasterboard on each side. 1
Russell griffiths Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 17 minutes ago, JohnMo said: 90mm studs 50mm dense mineral wool I used rock wool Flexi - zero issues and normal 12.5mm plasterboard on each side. This is exactly what I have done in the house. im just thinking plasterboard is cheap if I buy a pack, and double boarding is easy if I’m already doing it and the screw gun is out.
JohnMo Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 11 minutes ago, Russell griffiths said: This is exactly what I have done in the house. im just thinking plasterboard is cheap if I buy a pack, and double boarding is easy if I’m already doing it and the screw gun is out. With the empty void even with 2x plasterboard each side, its still a drum. Air is a great way to carry noise.
saveasteading Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Impact noise or airborne? For both, if you can spare a bit more wall width (how much do you have?) Studs twice, staggered to face each room with plasterboard only on one set of studs, so that you have physical discontinity. That deals with bumps and some loud noise, especially bass. eg a 100mm sole plate but 75mm studs lining up alternately with only one room or the other.. @ 600mm cc, twice, so actually every 300mm Then fill the void with any mineral wool, and you can even put some between studs and the 'other' side. It will snake. One sheet pb each side, possibly upgrade to the denser blue faced grade. for dB figures see the Knauff catalogue. That will be stunningly good, with the weaknesses being at plates to floor, ceiling and existing walls, so you'll still hear the vacuum bumping at skirtings.
Russell griffiths Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 3 hours ago, saveasteading said: Impact noise or airborne? For both, if you can spare a bit more wall width (how much do you have?) Studs twice, staggered to face each room with plasterboard only on one set of studs, so that you have physical discontinity. That deals with bumps and some loud noise, especially bass. eg a 100mm sole plate but 75mm studs lining up alternately with only one room or the other.. @ 600mm cc, twice, so actually every 300mm Then fill the void with any mineral wool, and you can even put some between studs and the 'other' side. It will snake. One sheet pb each side, possibly upgrade to the denser blue faced grade. for dB figures see the Knauff catalogue. That will be stunningly good, with the weaknesses being at plates to floor, ceiling and existing walls, so you'll still hear the vacuum bumping at skirtings. No room for that the whole building is only 6mx6m and it’s only a holiday let so only slept in for 4-5 consecutive nights. just looking at a cheap n cheerful solution. probably easier to just buy a couple of packs of acoustic insulation and chuck it in. trying to save a fiver here and there. 1
saveasteading Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 15 minutes ago, Russell griffiths said: No room for that You suggest 90mm studs. So you could use 90mm as the sole plate etc, then studs of CLS 63mm.
Onoff Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago The 16mm soundblock (blue) board I used does what it says on the tin.
saveasteading Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I have been advised (off the record) that none of the wall constructions perform as well in real life as in acoustic tests. This is because the tests are not between real rooms, but through a central area of a panel. ie no flanking sound. The difference between grey and blue will be fairly accurate though.
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