I have about 600 pounds of bricks and settled on 2" thick walls and a 6 x 6 x 18" volume. That takes it from 37 cps to ~ 1.67 cps. ( Don't judge, the permanent home is behind the little door... which is inconveniently blocked by 600 pounds of lead. )

The lead-shine is the dominant feature. Hints of NORM also.

I tried various options for attenuation of the lead-shine. For whatever reason getting elementally pure tin is stupid expensive and seeing what others here have done tried pewter tankard + copper tubing. That worked, but left a pretty large lead signal - likely everything to was too thin and not fully enclosing the probe. I had a 4" diameter roll of plastic backed copper flashing - so think alternating layers of copper and poly-something-or-other about 1cm thick - its several pounds of copper. Its a common hardware store item used for protecting wood posts. This worked really well. The K-40 peak is the dominant feature. This is the low end...

and the high end, with K-40 and its straight out of compton continuum peak in the 1200 range - I think.

Once that was worked out, I was continuously getting the NORM spectrum at low levels. I figured it might be the lead itself - which would be bad. Or some radium containing thing in my collection was being seen. But no, it was radon IN THE ROOM plating out RDPs inside the shield. ( See first spectra, its there too. ) To fix this, I keep the lead at a slightly positive electrostatic potential using a cheap "ion generator" power supply. This repels the RDP and keeps it from plating out in / on the chamber. You can see they are now entirely absent in the second spectra. I got the idea from a RDP precipitator I had cobbled together - I figure just "run it in reverse."
The question: I am particularly interested in 46 keV - any suggestions on cleaning up that area specifically would be helpful.
-- Bob
( Mahar )