WAYNE0
Well-Known Member
Looking for some ideas on what to use on my floor for sound deadener
weight doesnt concern me ill check it out thankslots of options with different costs tied to them. I went with the Dynamat 10455. Worked out ok. I only put it on the interior floor and firewall. I might go back and do inside the doors at some point. As with any sound deadener, there is a weight penalty. a box is about 20 lbs and was enough to do the floor. I needed 2 more sheets for the firewall so all in about 22 lbs?
Same! $60 box covered the entire floor panI used Killmat and like it.
i found it on amazon did it make a differenceSame! $60 box covered the entire floor panView attachment 1716386291View attachment 1716386290View attachment 1716386296View attachment 1716386297
Nice work!Same! $60 box covered the entire floor panView attachment 1716386291View attachment 1716386290View attachment 1716386296View attachment 1716386297
That’s where I bought mine. I’ve never had door cards or headliner out so I’ve only done the floor at this point. I can tell a difference in road noise for sure and there is absolutely no heat radiating anywhere from the floorboard.i found it on amazon did it make a difference
I considered that before I applied the Dynamat in my truck (response #13), and I made sure that not only did I prep and/or seal the surface(s) before applying it, I also made damn sure to roll it out as best possible to (hopefully) eliminate any air pockets, and thus moisture, from getting in there. Only time will tell if I was successful, and I'll be long gone before the next owner finds out.Just curious - has anyone noticed any problems with moisture collecting under sound-absorbing mat and causing rust issues? I’m in the process of repairing rust issues on the floorpans of my ‘65 Dart GT convertible, and have already replaced the pans in my ‘65 coupe. It seems to me that any moisture coming up from underneath would be trapped between the mat and the floor. I’ve considered putting in something like Dynamat, but I’m not concerned about the noise or the heat, but my cars are, or will be, winter-only cars in Arizona. But even Arizona cars rust. My donor car had unexpected rust in various places and it was an Arizona car since new. Again, not criticizing, just asking a question.
We paint mine with Rustoleum oil based industrial DTM before we put the Killmat on, so I don't see how in heck it's gonna rust.Just curious - has anyone noticed any problems with moisture collecting under sound-absorbing mat and causing rust issues? I’m in the process of repairing rust issues on the floorpans of my ‘65 Dart GT convertible, and have already replaced the pans in my ‘65 coupe. It seems to me that any moisture coming up from underneath would be trapped between the mat and the floor. I’ve considered putting in something like Dynamat, but I’m not concerned about the noise or the heat, but my cars are, or will be, winter-only cars in Arizona. But even Arizona cars rust. My donor car had unexpected rust in various places and it was an Arizona car since new. Again, not criticizing, just asking a question.
That doesn't bother me at all. In fact, I knew ahead of time that I would be redesigning the floor tunnel for the T5 five speed. Nothing a cut off wheel and a mig welder cannot handle.DO NOT get deadener for the floor that is self adhesive!!! some day you will have to work on something, or weld on the floor pan underneath and removal of self adhesive sound deadener can be near impossible and very time intensive. I used Dynamat products on my latest project and used DynaPad which is thick with multiple density layers (much more effective) I even ran it right up the firewall in front, stripped the fiberglass insulation off some new firewall insulation backing boards and used the factory push fasteners through the DynaPad to hold it in place. This for the same reason - a place where future work might be done...