Articles tagged “rw”
6 articles covering rw in acoustic engineering and building design.
ISO 717: Sound Insulation Rating Systems (Rw, STC, Dnt,w) Decoded
Decode ISO 717 sound insulation ratings — how Rw, STC, DnT,w, and L'nT,w are calculated, why lab and field values differ, and how to avoid the flanking transmission trap.
What is Airborne Sound? How Noise Travels Through Air and Walls
Airborne sound is noise transmitted through the air that strikes a building partition, causing it to vibrate and radiate sound on the other side. Learn STC, Rw, mass law, and control strategies.
What is Transmission Loss (TL)?
Transmission loss is the reduction in sound energy as it passes through a building element like a wall, floor, or window. Learn how TL is measured, what STC and Rw mean, and how mass law works.
DIN 4109 German Sound Insulation: Requirements, Calculation Methods, and Compliance
DIN 4109:2018 is Germany's mandatory building acoustics standard covering airborne and impact sound insulation for residential, educational, and office buildings. This guide covers every requirement table and calculation procedure.
Understanding Sound Insulation: STC, Rw, and Why Walls Don't Block All Frequencies Equally
STC (Sound Transmission Class) and Rw (Weighted Sound Reduction Index) both rate how well a wall blocks sound — but they use different standards, different frequency ranges, and can give different results for the same wall. Here is what each rating means, how they are measured, and which one applies to your project.
STC vs Rw: American vs European Sound Insulation Ratings — Same Wall, Different Numbers
STC and Rw both rate how well a wall blocks sound, but they use different frequency ranges, different reference curves, and can rate the same wall differently by 2-5 dB. For international projects, knowing the conversion matters. Here is the complete comparison with worked examples.