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Acoustic Wood PanelsSlat · Ceiling · Fire-rated

Fluted acoustic panel

A softly reeded, continuous face — a calmer alternative to open slats, on an acoustic backer.

The fluted acoustic panel presents a softly reeded, continuous timber face — rounded vertical grooves rather than open slats — for a calmer, more tactile surface. Behind that face sits the acoustic backer that does the absorbing, so the panel works as treatment while reading as a warm architectural finish.

As with the whole range, the geometry shown is the planned specification. Because a fluted profile absorbs differently from an open slat, its absorption and reaction-to-fire figures are published per finish only against that build-up's own test report — never assumed from another panel.

Specification

FormatFluted/reeded panel on acoustic backer
Nominal panel size2400 × 600 mm (planned standard)
Coverage per panel≈ 1.44 m²
MountingDirect-fix or battened; butt-jointed
Sound absorption (αw)Test report pendingpending
Reaction to fire (Euroclass)Test report pendingpending

Why some rows say “pending”. We are pre-launch. Absorption (αw / NRC) and reaction-to-fire (Euroclass) figures are published per finish only when a named test report supports them, and FSC when the certificate is held — never before. Geometry shown is the planned standard specification.

How many panels?

9panels at ≈ 1.44 m² each
covers ≈ 13.0 m² — add a margin for cuts and offsets

Finishes

  • Natural oak
  • Walnut
  • Smoked oak
  • Black
  • Grey

Typical applications

  • Reception and lobby feature walls
  • Hospitality and showroom interiors
  • Spaces wanting a calmer, continuous timber face

See and feel it before you specify, or get a project price.

Frequently asked questions

Does a fluted panel absorb as much as an open slat?

It depends entirely on the build-up. A fluted face absorbs through its acoustic backer and any openings, and a continuous profile can behave differently from open slats — so the fluted range carries its own αw from its own ISO 354 test, rather than a slat panel's figure.

What is the difference from a slat panel?

A fluted panel reads as a continuous, softly grooved surface, where a slat panel shows distinct slats with visible gaps. Acoustically both rely on the backer behind the face; the choice is mostly about the look and the tested performance of each build-up.