lacasse@randvax.UUCP (Mark LaCasse) (06/12/86)
RE: Dialog in net.music.synth about how to absorb sound in a recording or listening room by covering walls/ceilings/floors ..... Latest question raised: are plastic egg cartons flammable? (the real ones eggs are sold in in the supermarket) REPLY: I am rather sure they are "flammable" in the building code sense. I think you must be defining "flammable" as "bursts into flames when lit by a match" or something. When a building starts to burn these things will be exposed to thousands of degrees F. You bet they will burn then. What kinds of toxic gases will they emit while burning? For example, it is against building codes in most jurstictions to put foil-faced fiberglass insulation rolls up on walls where the foil side will be available to inhabitants. This is because the adheasive that holds the foil unto the fiberglass is flammable. They rate these things by flame spread rate when lit by high temperature flames. Experimenting with it, I found the foil and its adheasive wouldn't sustain much of a flame, even when lit with a propane torch. But it is still too flamable for exposed wall surfaces (where fires are most likely to start). It is a lot more flammable than wall-board/gypson-board! (BTW, there is a special type of foil-backed fiberglass that is legal for exposure on walls, FSK-25 (thats a flame spread rating). But it costs about 5 times as much as the stuff they sell in the "building centers". I read that even Sonex (original type) is too flamable to meet many building codes for wall application. Sonex 2 might. A competitor to Sonex, Soundcoat, claims their product is sufficiently fire proof to meet building codes. I read in a book in our local library, with a title something like "How to build a small recording studio", that Owens Corning (or someone else) makes a special fiberglass bat designed to absorb all audio frequencies (except the very low end) equally. The author recommend using that in wood framed boxes hung like big pictures on walls. The boxes were covered with cloth, and about 4' x 4' x 3". Or he recommend using the same audio-special fiberglass above a light weight drop-ceiling. Does anyone know of better or cheaper ways to absorb sound (without excessive fire risk)? Mark LaCasse qantel!hplabs!sdcrdcf!randvax!lacasse c/o The Rand Corporation cbosgd!ihnp4!sdcrdcf!randvax!lacasse 1700 Main Street lacasse@Rand-Unix Santa Monica, CA 90406 213/393-0411 ext. 7420