JC if you are going to the trouble of those switchbacks it isn't much more trouble to add tuned quarter wave cavities and those can have a profound effect on sound levels. Lincoln uses them in their engine intakes. All you need to know is how big to make them, and to nail it down you should make friends with an audiophile. Often the sound man at a church is such a person. He may have a meter which samples the sound spectrum and can tell you the frequencies that are loudest. From the center frequency you can determine the quarter wave length and from that include trap(s) in your design. If you cancel out just the loudest couple of bands the rest should be fairly easy.Jim
So let's think about this. If you have a pulse and you use it to cancel the next one what does that do to the first pulse? Doesn't it cancel it too? Seems it would. Probably depends on how the exit feed was constructed. I don't know all the answers here but certainly someone does and I'm sure you can find it on the web. I do personally know at least one guy who built wave traps to get rid of a drone in his exhaust and said it worked very well. He simply attached it using a "T"and a 90 so it ran along the pipe. Personally I think I would use a tall narrow slot right at the cancellation point with enough throat area to handle the airflow without it having to speed up too much. It might be an advantage to angle it towards the reflecting wall or it might not.Now one thing you can do is play different frequency tones from a google search and it should be fairly easy to match the sounds from your genset. My guess, it'll be somewhere not too far from 200 hz that you hear the loudest noise. The wavelength of 200 hz is 150 cm or 59", so 1/4 wave for 200 hz would be 14-3/4". Well within reach for this construction.BTW, all this info is an easy google search away.Jim
So I think I understand better. Basically I would measure the generators frequency and find out at what hertz it's the loudest. Then I run the equation to see how many inches is the quarter wave. Then I build the box with the switchback however many inches the quarter wave equation dictates. Line the switchback with some acoustical foam and in theory it should cancel out most to the sound but not restrict air flow. Am I understanding the concept, or am I way off?I found this pic that I thought was interesting how the do the air intake and exit. What are your thoughts?
Does your setup kill most of the noise? What do you mean when you suggest you would do something different with the exhaust? You also mention the intake. Is it too small? Not enough air flow? Does your gender overheat?