0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 2786 times.
Danny, that is one low number.
...Maybe my phone sucks? Or I am one very lucky audio dude. If I am able to borrow some real equipment I'd love to check. But I'm not going to lay out $hundreds for a real mic and measurement tools.
even if @rockadanny is actually achieving an accurately measured noise floor in the vicinity of 30dBA, that is a seriously excellent result.
On phone from app NIOSH SLM I registered a 27.2 dB (A )I guess those 24 GIK assorted panels I picked up locally for $1K has paid off.
Several of the thread participants here have attributed the action of their room acoustic treatments to their measured noise floor result. This is factually incorrect. Your acoustic treatments have no impact on your room's noise floor measurement whatsoever. Room acoustic treatments primarily effect the sounds generated within the room. A low noise floor is a result of the isolation of your room from external noise pollution and as such is a function of a bunch of factors completely unrelated to your interior acoustic treatment efforts.