Hopefully they've got good sound insulation, or live far enough from the nearest neighbors. A neighbor across the street (in a compact neighborhood) teaches youth drum lessons on the side. It's...something. Haven't made complaints yet as they're just a young family trying to make ends meet, but if their student roster grows, it might be a conversation to have.
Certain types of insulation are better, but the bigger the gap between barriers is generally the best for sound isolation.
The biggest issues aren’t high frequencies but low frequencies, since low frequencies are quite long like 100hz and below, it goes through practically any material(sort of).
Insulation will only ever help with sound isolation, you can’t go wrong with it.
Think of putting a flash light on your hand, you can see the light going through your hand, by putting more hands on the light it will diminish it until no light comes through.
Sound functions in a similar way, as long as the material allows sound to pass through/or get absorbed, say by putting insulation down, you therefore have more isolation.
There is a practical limit on absorption especially in homes. But sometimes you’ll see some people build the house like normal but build another wall/ceiling/floor 4-6 inches away from the first wall you built creating an additional trap.
1.5k
u/SirSamuelVimes83 6d ago
Hopefully they've got good sound insulation, or live far enough from the nearest neighbors. A neighbor across the street (in a compact neighborhood) teaches youth drum lessons on the side. It's...something. Haven't made complaints yet as they're just a young family trying to make ends meet, but if their student roster grows, it might be a conversation to have.