A guitar speaker
isolation cabinet has a built-in mounting baffle for a guitar speaker and a permanently mounted microphone clip. A compact isolation cabinet contains a small guitar speaker such as 6½" diameter and sometimes an attached
power attenuator to prevent blowing the speaker. A guitar speaker
isolation box is large enough to contain a standard guitar speaker cabinet such as a 1x12", 2x12" or 4x12" cabinet and a couple of compact microphone stands. Inexpensive but less effective
DIY implementations of this approach are to put a guitar speaker and microphone in a closet, place
gobo partitions around a speaker cabinet to somewhat deflect the sound, or form a tent with multiple layers of heavy blankets over a guitar speaker cabinet and microphone. An
isolation booth is a small room large enough to contain a single performer along with a rig, enabling the instrument to interact with the amplifier while isolating the rest of the band from the extreme volume. Finally, the
live room of a
recording studio provides sound isolation between an entire band and the
control room, allowing the studio engineers to work at manageable volumes and prevent
listener fatigue. The
frequency response of an isolation system depends on the number of microphones, the type of microphones, microphone positioning, cabinet dimensions, speaker size, speaker model, and the amount of sound-absorption material inside the isolation cabinet. To control the resulting response, a dedicated
equalizer can be used to enhance or reduce specific frequency ranges. The small volume of an isolation cabinet does not produce audible room
reverberation, so the sound generally has to be enhanced with an electronic reverb. ==Degree of sound isolation==