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Can you really absorb bass with a free-hanging sheet of vinyl? Here's why limp mass hangers don't work and what to do instead. 📖 Free Guide to Bass Traps: https://www.acousticsinsider.com/bass... This is week 6 in the bass trap breakdown series, and this time I'm looking at a design that shows up in a few Sound on Sound articles: hanging a sheet of mass loaded vinyl (MLV) loosely in front of some insulation material, with the idea that the vinyl vibrates sympathetically with the sound and absorbs bass that way. Sounds plausible. But the physics tell a different story. A sealed membrane absorber works because the heavy sheet sits on top of an enclosed air cavity, creating a mass-spring system that resonates at a specific frequency. That resonance is the mechanism doing the actual energy extraction. Take away the sealed cavity, and you take away the spring. No spring, no resonance, no bass absorption. What the barrier mat actually does is resist acceleration and block sound transmission. It's a barrier, not an absorber. If you see improvements from a design like this, it's the insulation material (rockwool, fiberglass) doing all the heavy lifting. The vinyl itself contributes nothing meaningful to low frequency absorption. I also cover why there's zero published measurement data for this type of design, why it gets confused with sealed membrane traps, and why it can create dangerous false confidence in your room treatment. 🕐 CHAPTERS: 0:00 Can free-hanging vinyl absorb bass? 0:28 Bass trap breakdown series overview 1:21 The Sound on Sound vocal booth design 2:39 Construction breakdown 3:07 Why this gets confused with membrane absorbers 3:52 The missing air cavity problem 4:52 What the barrier mat actually does 5:32 Blocking sound vs. absorbing sound 5:54 The 2020 Sound on Sound example 7:43 My own experiments with this concept 8:25 Why no measurement data exists 9:30 The insulation is doing all the work 9:41 Should you use them in your studio? 10:46 Pros and cons summary 10:59 Key takeaways 11:55 Build A Better Bass Trap course 12:25 Next week: PSI AVAA C214 active bass absorbers 🎯 Whenever you're ready, there are 4 ways I can help you: → Speaker Placement Workshop (FREE) Perfect first step for new studios or fixing low-end issues https://www.acousticsinsider.com/phan... → Build A Better Bass Trap Get professional low-end control without the "dead" room sound https://www.acousticsinsider.com/buil... → Pro Studio Consulting Personalized guidance for your complete studio transformation https://www.acousticsinsider.com/pro-... → Treatment Essentials Bundle Complete system for speaker placement, bass traps & panel placement https://www.acousticsinsider.com/acou... RESOURCES IN THIS VIDEO: https://www.soundonsound.com/techniqu... https://www.soundonsound.com/techniqu... 📺 RELATED VIDEOS: Bass Trap Breakdown Series: • Bass Trap Breakdown: Every Type Explained 💬 ABOUT ACOUSTICS INSIDER: I'm Jesco, an aerospace engineer turned sound nerd and professional mixing engineer with 15+ years of experience. Through Acoustics Insider, I teach home studio acoustic treatment techniques that actually work without all the voodoo. My goal is simple: help you get professional-sounding results from your home studio without breaking the bank or falling for expensive myths.