What would be better for sound quality?
What would be better for sound quality?
I have 100sqft of RAAMMAT to do a 4 door grand prix, Rick said it should be enough, but I dunno, its a lot of space with a huge trunk.
Would it be better to double layer the front doors (which is really 4 layers) single layer back doors and use the rest on the trunk or do 1 layer(2 on the front doors) over the whole car (Also I am not doing the roof)
Would it be better to double layer the front doors (which is really 4 layers) single layer back doors and use the rest on the trunk or do 1 layer(2 on the front doors) over the whole car (Also I am not doing the roof)
- Bfowler
- Briaans..... BRIAAAAANNNNNNS
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yep, the foot well area lets through quite a bit of noise so just doing that would help if you cant do the whole floor.
the rear deck is known for causing vibrations from the sub. however i would skip the sound deadening for it, and if it rattles pick up some of that double sided foam tape and go to town on your back deck with it
the rear deck is known for causing vibrations from the sub. however i would skip the sound deadening for it, and if it rattles pick up some of that double sided foam tape and go to town on your back deck with it
my ex-girlfriend said "its car audio or me"
i've had tougher choices at a soda machine...
i've had tougher choices at a soda machine...
- dragonplayboy
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better yet, cough up another 60-80 bones for 100 sq feet of some cheep stuff like fatmat, and use it on the floors. Raammat is vastly superior, but I think that assuming you're using something of a comparable thickness & weight that using it on a horizontal surface should be fine. I'm a Raammat-only guy when it comes to any door, wall, roof, etc, but I think that for the floor you could probably save a few bucks and get some cheaper stuff, since you don't have to worry about it falling off.
- dedlyjedly
- Silent but Dedly
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I have to disagree. Yes, there is a lot of road noise and such that proper sound treatment on the floorboards can eliminate, but sound deadener alone isn't likely the best approach. All sound deadener is effectively used for is a mass-loading layer for your sound treatments. By adding mass to a panel it drives the resonant frequency down. Thus, the lighter the sheetmetal (door structures and outer skin) the more effective sound deadening will be. Every vehicle is different, but most have substantially heavier materials in the floorboard than the rest of the vehicle. The best way to determine this is to test by knocking on the suspected trouble area. If it's dead and there is no resonance then there will be no benefit to adding additional mass layers.444 FED wrote:QFT!Bfowler wrote:i don't think a double layer on the fronts are necessary. i think using the 2nd layer for the floor would be a better use of it
Every time I install raammat I use it in conjunction with the Ensolite foam that Rick sells. In fact, a layer of ensolite goes over the top of almost all raammat that is installed. The ensolite is great for absorbing noise (sound barrier) and for decoupling rigid materials that would other wise rattle against one another.
Used together, these sound treatments will yield a synergistic effect and you'll be amazed at the difference it makes. But if I had to choose one or the other due to budget, I'd choose the closed-cell foam!
- Bfowler
- Briaans..... BRIAAAAANNNNNNS
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dedlyjedly wrote:I have to disagree. Yes, there is a lot of road noise and such that proper sound treatment on the floorboards can eliminate, but sound deadener alone isn't likely the best approach. All sound deadener is effectively used for is a mass-loading layer for your sound treatments. By adding mass to a panel it drives the resonant frequency down. Thus, the lighter the sheetmetal (door structures and outer skin) the more effective sound deadening will be. Every vehicle is different, but most have substantially heavier materials in the floorboard than the rest of the vehicle. The best way to determine this is to test by knocking on the suspected trouble area. If it's dead and there is no resonance then there will be no benefit to adding additional mass layers.444 FED wrote:QFT!Bfowler wrote:i don't think a double layer on the fronts are necessary. i think using the 2nd layer for the floor would be a better use of it
Every time I install raammat I use it in conjunction with the Ensolite foam that Rick sells. In fact, a layer of ensolite goes over the top of almost all raammat that is installed. The ensolite is great for absorbing noise (sound barrier) and for decoupling rigid materials that would other wise rattle against one another.
Used together, these sound treatments will yield a synergistic effect and you'll be amazed at the difference it makes. But if I had to choose one or the other due to budget, I'd choose the closed-cell foam!
very true, but i was only speakering to making the best use of what product he already had
my ex-girlfriend said "its car audio or me"
i've had tougher choices at a soda machine...
i've had tougher choices at a soda machine...
Say what?dedlyjedly wrote:I have to disagree. Yes, there is a lot of road noise and such that proper sound treatment on the floorboards can eliminate, but sound deadener alone isn't likely the best approach. All sound deadener is effectively used for is a mass-loading layer for your sound treatments. By adding mass to a panel it drives the resonant frequency down. Thus, the lighter the sheetmetal (door structures and outer skin) the more effective sound deadening will be. Every vehicle is different, but most have substantially heavier materials in the floorboard than the rest of the vehicle. The best way to determine this is to test by knocking on the suspected trouble area. If it's dead and there is no resonance then there will be no benefit to adding additional mass layers.444 FED wrote:QFT!Bfowler wrote:i don't think a double layer on the fronts are necessary. i think using the 2nd layer for the floor would be a better use of it
Every time I install raammat I use it in conjunction with the Ensolite foam that Rick sells. In fact, a layer of ensolite goes over the top of almost all raammat that is installed. The ensolite is great for absorbing noise (sound barrier) and for decoupling rigid materials that would other wise rattle against one another.
Used together, these sound treatments will yield a synergistic effect and you'll be amazed at the difference it makes. But if I had to choose one or the other due to budget, I'd choose the closed-cell foam!
In every vehicle that I have cut apart, the floor was made from the same thickness of material that the rest of the car was, especially when it comes to later model cars.
Anytime you add mass or weight to a panel, the resonant frequency goes down, and makes it more difficult ofr it to get "excited" and start rinng from teh sound system OR from air fluctuations and other sources of noise outside of the car. The idea is to move the resonant frequency down so far that it's below audible range.
hmmmVW337 wrote:For the floor nothing beats lead septum foam............both CAE and DM have a version of it but I prefer the cascade version. Too bad you didn't make it here in time for the CAE buy in I arranged........
I was goign to to say deaden my floor did basically jack shit....
Can one send others to war if hes not willing to go himself?