Fundamentals

Sound Power vs Sound Pressure: What’s the Difference?

Diagram comparing sound power and sound pressure, showing a fixed sound power in watts versus sound pressure in decibels measured at a listening distance
Fundamentals
Sound power is the energy a source emits; sound pressure is what a listener hears. Mix them up and you miss the spec by 10–20 dB. Here is the difference, the conversion, and where each one belongs.

Sound power is the energy a source emits; sound pressure is what a listener hears. Mix them up and you miss the spec by 10–20 dB. Here is the difference, the conversion, and where each one belongs.

Decibels Explained: What the Numbers Actually Mean

Decibels Explained what dB Numbers Mean
Fundamentals
Decibels aren’t a unit of loudness — they’re a logarithmic ratio. Every 10 dB is 10x the sound energy and roughly twice as loud to the ear. Covers dBA versus dBC, SPL versus sound power, and OSHA/NIOSH exposure limits.

Decibels aren’t a unit of loudness — they’re a logarithmic ratio. Every 10 dB is 10x the sound energy and roughly twice as loud to the ear. Covers dBA versus dBC, SPL versus sound power, and OSHA/NIOSH exposure limits.

Echo vs. Reverberation: What’s the Difference?

Echo vs Reverberation What's the Difference
Fundamentals
Echo and reverberation are often confused, but they're different acoustic problems with different fixes. An echo is a distinct repeat delayed 50 ms or more; reverberation is overlapping reflections decaying over time, measured in RT60. Here's how to tell them apart and treat each one.

Echo and reverberation are often confused, but they’re different acoustic problems with different fixes. An echo is a distinct repeat delayed 50 ms or more; reverberation is overlapping reflections decaying over time, measured in RT60. Here’s how to tell them apart and treat each one.

How Sound Vibrations Affect the Body

How Do Sound Vibrations Affect the Body
Fundamentals
How sound waves move through tissue and bone, not just the ear - what low frequencies do to circulation, the nervous system, and cortisol, and why dose, duration, and vibration exposure matter more than volume alone.

How sound waves move through tissue and bone, not just the ear – what low frequencies do to circulation, the nervous system, and cortisol, and why dose, duration, and vibration exposure matter more than volume alone.

Decibel Level Chart: How Loud Are Common Sounds?

Decibel Level Chart Commercial Acoustics
Fundamentals · Ratings & Charts
Decibel levels for everyday sounds - from a whisper (30 dB) to a jet engine (140 dB) - plus OSHA safe exposure limits, hearing damage thresholds, and acoustic design context.

Decibel levels for everyday sounds – from a whisper (30 dB) to a jet engine (140 dB) – plus OSHA safe exposure limits, hearing damage thresholds, and acoustic design context.

Why Sound Moves Faster in Concrete Than in Air

Why Sound Moves Faster in Concrete Than in Air
Fundamentals
Sound travels four times faster through concrete than air — why stiffness beats density, what that means for structure-borne noise paths, and how to turn one of the worst transmission materials into a quiet building.

Sound travels four times faster through concrete than air — why stiffness beats density, what that means for structure-borne noise paths, and how to turn one of the worst transmission materials into a quiet building.

20 Amazing Facts About Sound: Science, Surprises & Real-World Acoustics

20 Amazing Facts About Sound
Fundamentals
From the loudest sound ever recorded to why a 1% gap leaks 50% of sound energy — twenty surprising facts about how sound behaves, why egg cartons don't absorb it, and what humans actually hear.

From the loudest sound ever recorded to why a 1% gap leaks 50% of sound energy — twenty surprising facts about how sound behaves, why egg cartons don’t absorb it, and what humans actually hear.

Airborne vs Structure-Borne Noise

Airborne vs Structure-Borne Noise
Fundamentals
Every noise complaint starts with one question — is the sound coming through air or through structure? How to tell which you're fighting, and the two completely different strategies for solving each.

Every noise complaint starts with one question — is the sound coming through air or through structure? How to tell which you’re fighting, and the two completely different strategies for solving each.

How Vibration Travels Through Buildings

How Vibration Travels Through Buildings
Fundamentals
Vibration doesn't fade like airborne sound — how it propagates through structure, why steel and concrete carry it so far, and the design moves that stop equipment and footfall noise before they ring through a building.

Vibration doesn’t fade like airborne sound — how it propagates through structure, why steel and concrete carry it so far, and the design moves that stop equipment and footfall noise before they ring through a building.

Principles of Soundproofing: Flanking & Workmanship

Fundamentals
Mass and decoupling do not matter if sound finds another way around - how flanking paths, penetrations, gaps, and on-site workmanship determine whether designed STC ratings hold up in the built room.

Mass and decoupling do not matter if sound finds another way around – how flanking paths, penetrations, gaps, and on-site workmanship determine whether designed STC ratings hold up in the built room.

How Sound Travels

How Sound Travels
Fundamentals
The physics behind how sound moves — airborne pressure waves, structure-borne vibration, speed through common building materials, frequency ranges, diffuse versus direct field, and how dBA falls off with distance.

The physics behind how sound moves — airborne pressure waves, structure-borne vibration, speed through common building materials, frequency ranges, diffuse versus direct field, and how dBA falls off with distance.

Understanding the Acoustic Properties of Sound

Fundamentals
The core acoustic properties — frequency, amplitude, wavelength, propagation through materials — and how the additive and logarithmic behavior of sound shapes every decision in studio, classroom, and building design.

The core acoustic properties — frequency, amplitude, wavelength, propagation through materials — and how the additive and logarithmic behavior of sound shapes every decision in studio, classroom, and building design.

Understanding Flanking Noise

Understanding Flanking Noise
Fundamentals
Why a high-STC wall can still fail — flanking paths through floors, ceilings, ducts, and framing, how they degrade designed performance, and the early-coordination moves that keep them from undoing the spec.

Why a high-STC wall can still fail — flanking paths through floors, ceilings, ducts, and framing, how they degrade designed performance, and the early-coordination moves that keep them from undoing the spec.

Soundproofing 101: Basics of Acoustics and Sound Attenuation

Soundproofing 101 Basics of Acoustics Sound Attenuation
Fundamentals
The four principles every soundproofing assembly uses (mass, decoupling, damping, absorption), how STC, IIC, and NRC measure performance, and the common myths — including soundproof paint — that quietly waste budget.

The four principles every soundproofing assembly uses (mass, decoupling, damping, absorption), how STC, IIC, and NRC measure performance, and the common myths — including soundproof paint — that quietly waste budget.

Noise Reduction vs Sound Absorption: How to Lower dB Levels

Noise Reduction vs Sound Absorption
Fundamentals
Absorption lowers dB in some situations and not in others — when it does, when blocking is the right call instead, and a real St. Pete restaurant example showing what coverage actually changes the meter.

Absorption lowers dB in some situations and not in others — when it does, when blocking is the right call instead, and a real St. Pete restaurant example showing what coverage actually changes the meter.