Best thin damping material?

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I believe the consensus is that wool felt is the best material for absorbing rear waves inside a speaker.

What if the thickness comes into play? If I'm limited to a specific thickness, say 1/4'', would wool felt still be the best material? If not, which material would be?
 
Sonic Barrier

But they don't make anything that thin. The multi-layer materials are particularly good. Below that the really think materials are best suited for damping sheet metal, such as PC enclosures.

Gravesen uses a lot of 8mm thick felt, about 1/3" in the kits he designs.

Best,

Erik
 
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I've been reading that stuffing can increase the apparent enclosure volume to the driver, which result in a lower F3 in a sealed speaker. Does this apply to passive radiator speakers and mean the PRs would be tuned lower than without stuffing?
 
Typically with a reflex enclosure one uses limited damping (ie the ½" cotton felt) so that the damping does not interfere with the reflex action (or increase the apparent volume).

In a sealed box you need to fill the entire speaker volume to get an apparent increase in volume (nominally one can get up to about 20%).

dave
 
So stuffing does not take away apparent enclosure volume right?

I'm making a very small speaker with maybe 2.5L of effective internal volume, so every bit of enclosure volume matters.

If it doesn't, I can line the walls with felt, and the stuff with polyfill or something. I'm reading it is not good to overstuff the enclosure, so I'm not quite sure what the balance should be without some trial and error.
 
So stuffing does not take away apparent enclosure volume right?
Not in small quantities. You need a fair amount to make it appear larger and even more makes it smaller again.

Higher air coupled box modes are not difficult to absorb with moderate damping. If you are going to use limited material it can be better to space it away from the walls. Waves build pressure at the walls and the opposite (velocity ie movement) is needed for this kind of damping to work.
 
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