toothless48
Mechanical
- Oct 27, 2014
- 29
Hi, I am working on a project with thin-walled aluminum extrusions (4" x 4" x 1/8" x 6' LG) that are bolted to a large machine that produces a lot of vibration. The concern (not yet proven, but suspected) is that the tubes will act as an acoustic chamber and produce a lot of nuisance noise. Redesigning the connection to the machine would make things a bit more complicated and is the least preferred option.
I am looking into cheap options to dampening the sound. The solution would preferably be reversible for serviceability, since there is a connectorized wire that runs through the tube, but it's not a deal-breaker.
Options I have thought of:
- Sand - the tube is not completely closed, so this would probably not work
- Expanding foam - this compromises a bit on the serviceability, but it would be acceptable. The bigger question - will expanding foam actually dampen the noise?
- Rubber sheet stuffed into the tube - would this work? Hopefully this would not become cost-prohibitive.
?
Thank you for reading!
I am looking into cheap options to dampening the sound. The solution would preferably be reversible for serviceability, since there is a connectorized wire that runs through the tube, but it's not a deal-breaker.
Options I have thought of:
- Sand - the tube is not completely closed, so this would probably not work
- Expanding foam - this compromises a bit on the serviceability, but it would be acceptable. The bigger question - will expanding foam actually dampen the noise?
- Rubber sheet stuffed into the tube - would this work? Hopefully this would not become cost-prohibitive.
?
Thank you for reading!