Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Softening Impact Sound

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Softening Impact Sound

    Anyone have any thoughts or experience in managing to quiet the impact sound when a ball hits the screen apart from sound absorbing wall or ceiling panels? I'm particularly curious on whether there are different screen options or maybe if putting anything behind the screen might help in absorbing the sound at all. Have a Foresight Sim in a Box set up in my barebones non-insulated garage so options are limited outside of sinking a ton of money into a general garage upgrade which I'm not going to do at the moment. Thought I would see if there might be lower cost (and understanbably less effective) solutions that might be more cosmetic in nature and still help take the edge off a bit. Thanks!

  • #2
    you can put a pad behind the screen

    Upgrade Your Golfing Experience with our HD Golf Impact Screen Pad - Now Available in 7 Sizes, Including a Cover. Perfect Your Swing and Improve Your Game


    the poly spacer screens are quieter as well

    Spectrum Golf specializes in DIY golf screens, golf enclosures and golf simulators. We can customize a golf screen frame to meet your exact specifications.


    thx

    Chip
    Spectrum Golf

    Comment


    • Bryson of Bogey Golf
      Bryson of Bogey Golf commented
      Editing a comment
      Great Chip. Just what I was looking for. Thanks!

  • #3
    Tada Click image for larger version

Name:	R-01669.jpg
Views:	1249
Size:	47.2 KB
ID:	369806 .

    Comment


    • Bryson of Bogey Golf
      Bryson of Bogey Golf commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks Bubb. Very helpful...

    • bubbtubbs
      bubbtubbs commented
      Editing a comment
      Sorry, couldn't resist.

    • Bryson of Bogey Golf
      Bryson of Bogey Golf commented
      Editing a comment
      Will be sure to leave them at my neighbors door.

  • #4
    Our SQ Screens stand for Super Quiet and could potentially help with impact noise reduction.

    You can check it out here

    Trung
    Par2Pro

    Comment


    • #5
      SQ screen from Par2Pro extremely quiet and excellent image. More noise from club impact than ball hitting the sq

      Comment


      • #6
        I have an 801 3-layer screen and I still wear earplugs... You're going to get as lot of 'impact sound' especially from driver, regardless of your screen. I get very little sound from my impact screen. Cheap earplugs work just fine and solve the problem - protect your hearing

        Here are 2 decent ones:


        and:


        PS, I'm also a musician and have been for years...

        Comment


        • #7
          do foam acoustic pads on the ceiling and adjacent walls help at all with sound?

          Comment


          • Brettster
            Brettster commented
            Editing a comment
            Tocino - Not much. They are more for wall protection... they do kind of muffle the sound, and deaden it a little, but from what I can tell - the crack of driver hitting the ball is in the wrong sound frequency to be stopped - better to use ear plugs, as I said in my post above.

          • ONNiT Systems
            ONNiT Systems commented
            Editing a comment
            Yes, foam acoustic pads on the ceilings and walls will help with sound.

            We offer premium sound-absorbing and high-impact panels that will help with sound and stop the speed of a ball on impact.

            Residentialsoundpanels.com

          • Brettster
            Brettster commented
            Editing a comment
            What's the db reduction exactly ONNiT Systems ? Would be nice to compare. Thanks.

        • #8
          It will help with the sound quality you hear but if your trying to prevent others from hearing then it’s not going to help much.

          Think of sound like water. Mass is the most effective tool for sound proofing. If you spray a water hose directly into a sponge it slows the water down but the water still gets through. It you spray it at a concrete wall it bounces back. The best soundproofing is creating a room within a room with air gapping between rooms and using as dense materials as possible.

          Comment


          • bubbtubbs
            bubbtubbs commented
            Editing a comment
            Spray foam insulation does a pretty good job. My kids' room is directly above the garage and you can't even hear the snowblower idling below let alone the impact noises, though the fire and emissions building code may also contribute to that - double layered 5/8" board with non overlapping seams and 16" of open air gap above ceiling joists before the floor joists begin.

          • preludesam
            preludesam commented
            Editing a comment
            Yeah, all that mass and the air gap definitely help. My issue is the garage door points straight to my neighbor. I gave up on soundproofing after looking into the cost and labor involved. Way cheaper to let your neighbors know a specific time and no late-night sessions.
        Working...
        X