hfsphoto
Mechanical
- Nov 30, 2006
- 5
As a photographer who frequently shoots classical music concerts, I've built several homemade small acoustic enclosures (sound blimps) for my Nikon digital SLR cameras. My current design consists of eight inch PVC round duct with a borosilicate lens window set into a PVC flat end-cap at the front and a removable polycarbonate rear plate. There is also a concentric outer PVC sleeve and tripod mount in the center, which allows me to easily rotate the whole enclosure to accommodate both vertical and horizontal shots. The camera and lens are supported by stacks of Sorbothane disks and much of the enclosure is filled with open-cell polyurethane foam. There's an electrical shutter release and autofocus cable and lens zooming is by soft braided cords extending through holes in the PVC duct.
Now for the questions:
PVC seems to work well but is there a better material? I assume that aluminum would be good, but would require some constrained layer damping.
Should I consider a double shell, or would the reduction in volume cut down on absorption of lows in the foam? Would a rigid or limp inner shell be better?
Can I dramatically reduce the volume with a more form-fitted enclosure, or is a larger volume better?
If I continue to use plastic barriers, which attenuate best for a given mass? I've used PVC, ABS, nylon, polycarbonate and G-10 fiberglass sheets.
Thanks,
Fred
Now for the questions:
PVC seems to work well but is there a better material? I assume that aluminum would be good, but would require some constrained layer damping.
Should I consider a double shell, or would the reduction in volume cut down on absorption of lows in the foam? Would a rigid or limp inner shell be better?
Can I dramatically reduce the volume with a more form-fitted enclosure, or is a larger volume better?
If I continue to use plastic barriers, which attenuate best for a given mass? I've used PVC, ABS, nylon, polycarbonate and G-10 fiberglass sheets.
Thanks,
Fred