Acoustic Enclosures, also known as soundproof rooms, noise reduction rooms, or noise chambers, are designed for the soundproof testing of products with specific testing requirements, also referred to as soundproof testing rooms. They are widely used for testing a variety of electronic products, such as speakers, microphones, small motors, household appliances, and vehicles.
Based on varying performance and features, there are different classification methods and names. Categorized by function into two types:
1. Noise Isolation Sources (Soundproofing Series): Primarily used for isolating large machinery. As these machines generate significant noise during operation, soundproofing rooms are employed to reduce noise levels and minimize their impact on the work environment. These rooms typically include doors, windows, air conditioning, and ventilation systems, as well as additional accessories like closed-circuit television for special needs. The series mainly covers: stamping machine soundproofing rooms, assembly line soundproofing rooms, fan soundproofing rooms, industrial soundproofing enclosures/cabinets, and soundproofing rooms for large equipment.
2. Isolate a quiet environment within a noisy source (Soundproofing/Noise Reduction Series): To test the product, the sound level must reach a certain decibel level, thus requiring a quiet environment in a high-noise setting. The noise level typically needs to be between 10-30 dB, with specific requirements tailored to customer needs. This includes: acoustic chambers, full acoustic chambers, semi-acoustic chambers, silent rooms, quiet rooms, isolation rooms, noise rooms, and audio-visual rooms, among others.
In practical applications, due to varying requirements, they can be categorized into fixed soundproof rooms and mobile soundproof rooms. Fixed rooms typically include amenities such as air conditioning, doors and windows, closed-circuit surveillance, and ventilation pipes. Mobile units, often referred to as sound isolation boxes, quiet rooms, noise reduction boxes, or silent speakers, differ from fixed rooms in their compact size and ease of mobility. They are suitable for various settings.



