Auralex Studiofoam Designer Kit Charcoal Gray
Home Treatment
Auralex Studiofoam Designer Kit Charcoal Gray
home treatment – click on the image below for more information.
- The DST-114s are also 1′ x 1’s that serve as the ideal design complement to the 112s and other DST Studiofoam products.
- They can easily be cut in 3″ shingles, allowing for a bunch of creative options when used singularly or with 112s.
- The two most commonly-used sound absorption materials are high-quality acoustic foam and specialized acoustic fiberglass
- The Auralex Studiofoam Designer Kit uses an advanced design to dampen rogue sounds in your studio.
home treatment
The Auralex Studiofoam Designer Kit uses an advanced design to dampen rogue sounds in your studio. Designer kit provides 32 – 1′ x 1′ x 2″ panels in your choice of burgundy or charcoal with 2 tubes of Tubetak Pro Liquid Adhesive and an instruction sheet.
Auralex Studiofoam Designer Kit Charcoal Gray
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Looks great, and the price is hard to believe.,
I was previously looking at similar acoustic panels that were $4-5 each, so to stumble on 32 of these for $59 was shocking. I’ve got 25 mounted over the listening area of my home theater and it looks and sounds so nice. I’m pondering getting a few more cases…
Here’s a tip – if you want only a semi-permanent installation discard the included Tubetack caulk and get some DAP Seal ‘n Peel. […] Holds these up just fine, and will peel away without damaging the paint or drywall should I chose to remove them.
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Hanging Tips,
Auralex has been around a long time and their foam does what it says it will do. No news there.
I’m going to disagree with the reviewer who recommended using DAP Seal ‘n’ Peel, though, if you want to preserve the paint behind the foam. Seal ‘n’ Peel will hold these panels up, but it will also leave stains. Instead, I suggest you buy some foam board (several brands, sizes, and quantities available here at Amazon), glue the Auralex panels to the foam board, then hang the foam boards as you would a picture.
There are several benefits to this.
1) No stains, of course.
2) Since you’re almost always going to be hanging these 1×1 squares together in arrays, it’s much, much easier to get them straight and square by gluing them up on horizontal foamboard than gluing them one by one to the wall, where they’re going to want to slide. Let gravity work for you instead of against.
3) It’s also easier to then get these foamboard-backed units to hang straight on the wall (or at angles, if you prefer), by using good ol’ picture-hanging technology.
4) If you wanted to get fancy, you could frame the foamboard-backed units.
5) You could also suspend the units from the ceiling or from curtain or picture rods, so there is space between the back and the wall, which will give you a bit more low-frequency reach.
By the way, just so you can plan accurately: these squares are not actually 12″ x 12″. They’re 11.75″ x 11.75″. Hard to believe they lose an entire .25″ cutting this stuff, so I’m not sure why they’re so far off.
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