Does Melamine allow airflow?
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Does Melamine allow airflow?
I cant find out if it does on the website, if it does it would be a great sound insulation for the vents on my case.
Thanks in advance!
Thanks in advance!
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Dude, you only made the first post 50 minutes ago. Give us working stiffs some time.Athlon Powers wrote:Bump for info.
My initial common-sense reaction (though I don't have the foam) would be that melamine will be similar to anything else, or any other foam, you will put in front of grills/openings. It is going to cause a reduction in airflow. If close enough to the fan, it may cause turbulence. It would seem logical that any material that will cut down on the transmission of sound (the waves of which travels via/thru air) is going to cut down on air flow. I don't think you can have good CFM and good damping in the same material.
But I didn't do well in physics, so I'm open to correction. I guess you'd like to hear from someone with melamine who's willing to give your idea a try. (If I recall, you have some melamine on order...if so, give it a try and report back to us).
I have the melamine foam covering every exposed inch of my case, and the temps didn't go up a single degree (well maybe 1 or 2 degrees, but nothing noticable). And my case cooling isn't the best in the world either. So if you've got halfway decent cooling/airflow, you've got nothing to worry about. I'll be putting this stuff in my new D8000 when it gets here, too.
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Darn, I thought that would be an easy way to block noise. I have that case below that has the really big grills in the front.miker wrote:Yeah don't put that over your fan holes. You would create an instant easy-bake oven.
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athlon powers what you want are mufflers
mufflers forces the air to go zig zag lines which lets the air flow (air -> flows hehehe) but traps the sound in the sound absorbing material.
check out this page: http://www.muffledcomputing.com/
there are other threads about muffling here you might want to check them too. just search the forums for mufflers
some say muffling an exhaust (or intake) will hamper airflow a bit. i think it depends on how large your opening is but i have no experience with muffling so i can't say much about it.
edit:
l33t is a derivation from elite
mufflers forces the air to go zig zag lines which lets the air flow (air -> flows hehehe) but traps the sound in the sound absorbing material.
check out this page: http://www.muffledcomputing.com/
there are other threads about muffling here you might want to check them too. just search the forums for mufflers
some say muffling an exhaust (or intake) will hamper airflow a bit. i think it depends on how large your opening is but i have no experience with muffling so i can't say much about it.
edit:
l33t is a derivation from elite
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Those are a bit large, I was hoping for something internal. Im gonna try this Melamine, take off the fiberglass and wrap it around my HDD.HadroLepton wrote:athlon powers what you want are mufflers
mufflers forces the air to go zig zag lines which lets the air flow (air -> flows hehehe) but traps the sound in the sound absorbing material.
check out this page: http://www.muffledcomputing.com/
there are other threads about muffling here you might want to check them too. just search the forums for mufflers
some say muffling an exhaust (or intake) will hamper airflow a bit. i think it depends on how large your opening is but i have no experience with muffling so i can't say much about it.
I agree. Not necessarily because of the removal of the fiberglass, but because of the nature of the foam. I think you'd be better off trying the Rubber Box method. But the only real way to know is to give it a try. If you do, let us know your results.Radeonman wrote:While I could be wrong, I'm guessing the fiberglass is an important part of the soudn absorbing process. While you won't ruin the product, per se, I imagine that just wrapping the textured paper around your hard drive will have little effect.
Of course, that's just radeonman speculation. I could be wrong.
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hmm
the foam's acoustic properties are the foam itself, not the backing. the fiberglass is there to keep the foam from misbehaving. It's there simply to bully the foam.
as for using it as a filter... NO. If you clog the vents with this stuff you are effectively masking the vents into nonexistance.
Cheers!
-Liq
as for using it as a filter... NO. If you clog the vents with this stuff you are effectively masking the vents into nonexistance.
Cheers!
-Liq