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Sound dampening

Started by Nightpath, April 15, 2014, 07:05:39 AM

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Nightpath

Don't know if this is the right section for it, but it does deal with the body.

Anyways, been thinking, besides carpet, how to dampen the sound coming into the car. It's already not too bad, but a little more can't hurt.

What have you guys done to dampen sound? I was thinking of putting expanding foam into the A-pllars and the folded sections on each side of the roof, as well as some insulation for the rear under the panels in top of the wheel wells.

heres some stuff I was thinking about :

Roxul for the firewall, and right in front of the shifter. reflects heat and doesn't burn : http://www.roxul.com/products/residential/roxul+safe'n'sound

http://www.rona.ca/en/insulation-04125311--1

for the ceiling : http://www.rona.ca/en/insulation---a2a-hi-performance-insulation


IowaEagle

With foam you have to fill every possible air pocket.  If not you will get localized rust in areas.  Where do the most of the road noises come from?  I am wondering if your Eagle did not come with extra quiet insulation.
<a href="http://www.wunderground.com/US/IA/Toledo.html?bannertypeclick=miniStates">Click for Toledo, IA Forecast" border="0" height="100" width="150 [/url]  


Not a Jeep.  Not a Car.  Its an AMC Eagle!

1982 Eagle SX/4 Sport;
1980 Concord DL;
1970 Ambassador 2 Dr HT, SST
2002 Hyundai Santa Fe;
2008 Jeep Patriot Sport - Freedom Drive II

priya

There's a product called lizard skin which sprays on and is designed to deaden sound.  It won't cause rust issues as something like house insulation may due to trapping and holding moisture.

Nightpath

One of the biggest problems is that I'm in Canada, and a lot of the products available in the US isn't up here.

One of the things I am going to do is get the extra backing on the carpet when I purchase it, or fine a type of housing insulation that's for sound dampening. I've noticed that the old guy that had my car didn't keep an eye on the transmission hump and the carpet has to be picked off of it (melted on). At this point I might pick up some Rocksul to layer where it's hot (doesn't melt, reflects the heat, :censored: made from rocks ;) )

Might try to see if I can find some yoga mats to cut and fold, read that it fits nicely and can absorb a lot of sound. There are several types of expanding foam, but most of them will hold in moisture. Was also thinking those foam pipe insulators, squeeze them inside just to dampen a bit of noise.

Amc1320

Hi nightpath

I used bubble wrap insulation that has a foil cover, not sure what the real name is....

Its used to insulate metal buildings, got some from a local metal roofing place, its real cheap and they just had some scrap pieces

I put it under the carpet, on the wheel wells in the back and everywhere else I could put it, I just cut it with scissors and used spray adhesive to keep in in place.

Made everything very quiet. Here is a pic I found that shows some of it as I was doing the floor in our Gremlin

Rob c
84 Eagle Limited Wagon (driven everyday)
81 Eagle Kammback
81 Spirit (undergoing surgery)
83 Spirit (parts car giving it all to keep the rest going)
Manchester, TN

BenM

There are lots of expensive products out there... but I shopped around the roofing and insulation supplies. The factory wasn't nearly as sophisticated as what's available now down at the home store and I'm a bit of a rambler mentality guy.

The felt carpet padding is standard felt carpet padding. (The foam padding just degrades too easily from light and heat, so avoid that.) Seams were filled with hot tar so they didn't rattle. Sometimes the felt padding had tar paper glued to it for some dampening. Before felt they used jute.

I've been happy so far at how the stuff holds up.

My procedure on the inside is to pull out everything in the area I'm working on, clean the metal and wire brush if necessary, then hit it with some rust converter primer in any bad spots. Small holes in otherwise good metal can get body plugs or sealer, but you want to eventually seal the area. Don't use silicone or RTV. You can paint over the kind of sealers you should use. It seems factory paint was thin and uneven if it existed inside.

Some people have just put a bedliner down instead of carpet, but it can't hurt under a carpet either. I've done that. It has mass and can be used to fill small gaps. It helps eliminate the 'tinny' noises. There's some good self adhesive roof flashing as well, again something to dampen noise. It's generally not as thick as the professional sound matting, but most brands are just the same asphalt-based stuff, the rest is adhesive on proprietary rubber sheet mixes.

I put some rubber mat inside doors after priming and painting. The factory tar had dried and come off, and the rubber really made the door sound solid when it was closed. The foil bubble wrap is great in the roof, it helps keep the car cool on sunny days. I also put some self-adhesive neoprene rubber on the inside of plastic panels and where panels rub metal to stop squeaks. It beats the old open-cell foam the factory used.

You have to be careful you don't make stuff to thick. . :-)

I'm sure the stereo guys and high-end restorers scoff at me, but the stuff works and holds up as well or better than the factory stuff for a fraction of the price of the high end stuff. The key for all of it is to clean, prime, clean, use a good 3M adhesive when you need one, and clean. Don't forget to clean.
NSS#47184

1987 AMC Eagle Sedan -- 1976 Pacer Coupe -- 1968 Pontiac Tempest Custom S -- 1940 Mercury (& a 2002 Jetta Turbodiesel, 5 spd., the Wife's Daily Driver)

Nightpath

That silver stuff is the same stuff I've been looking at. Awesome to see that someone else has tried it!

vangremlin

I've used the same silver/bubble wrap material as Amc1320 under carpeting.  It worked really well!  Good luck.
1981 Kammback 258 - "Pepe"
1980 Coupe 258 - "Ginger
1972 Gremlin X 304
1978 Gremlin 4 cyl 121 - sold
1964 TBird 390 - sold

Draekon

Does anyone know that the silver bubble wrap stuff is called?

JayRamb

A couple years ago I tore out my seats and carpet, put sound insulation in. I used 'dryer vent' insulation from Home Depot. It was cheap, has a sticky back, padded and sound proofed the heck out of that car! It is SO sound tight. I love it!
Jayson H.
Best HWY Mileage of 87 Eagle:  26.2 MPG

Believer in AMSOIL & Seafoam
1987 Garnet Red Eagle Wagon: 70,500 miles
1967 Rambler Rebel 4 Door 290 V8 (original family car) Marina Aqua 142K miles
1985 Eagle Wagon in Autumn Brown 74,800 miles as my daily driver
SOLD 1984 Black Eagle Limited w/Tach & gauge cluster: 245,100 miles SOLD

Mernsy


Nightpath

It's called Ayr-Foil at Home Depot. I picked up a crapload and it's cheap.

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