Sound damping a vehicle, the right way

DzlToy

Explorer
Sound Deadener Showdown in Maryland, was a staple in the DIY car audio industry for many years. Sadly, Don has retired and closed SDS, as of early 2019. I was looking through some old notes today and came across his site, which I found to be down, as of early 2020.

Thankfully, there is an archived version of that site, here:


As there is no telling how long this will be up, it would be wise to make notes or save the pages that interest you.

How To: https://web.archive.org/web/20201031153434/https://www.sounddeadenershowdown.com/how-to

Sound deadening a van: https://web.archive.org/web/2020103...nddeadenershowdown.com/camper-van-conversions

Highlights: DO NOT COVER your floor or ceiling in Dynamat or any other single material. This adds unnecessary weight, takes money out of your pocket and actually DECREASES performance. There is a science to sound deadening and no one material does everything. Companies from Rolls Royce to high end home theater builders have used decoupling for years, to isolate, damp and limit NVH, in one form or another by using multiple, specific materials to accomplish a task. Layering is the key, again, using multiple, decoupled materials, nominally a constraining layer, a moisture/thermal barrier and a sound damping layer, often MLV. Additional products such as Thinsulate or varying densities of specialty foams can be used to tune or tailor the space to meet your requirements.

If you doubt the value of proper sound damping, go take a ride in a new Lexus, Bentley or Rolls and prepare to be astonished. Everything from heavy felt-like material inside the fender wells to special 'mats' placed inside the tires, is used to keep unwanted noise out of the cabin. While this may or may not be your goal, you can take a page from this book and improve sound damping, corrosion resistance and thermal performance of your van, SUV or camper. If you ride a GS1200, nothing on this page will help you. :D
 

Nailhead

Well-known member
I covered both floor, ceiling, and back of the cab on my ‘72 IH 1310 with Dynamat and Dynaliner, and am tickled pink with the results: it’s quieter than my ‘08 Dodge 2500 inside. Could it have been made quieter with the methodology described above? Maybe so, but I don’t feel like any improvement is necessary, or would be worthwhile.
 
D

Deleted member 9101

Guest
Indie some sound deadening in my F150. Made a noticable difference, even though it was a new truck at the time.
 

85_Ranger4x4

Well-known member
She ain't a Cadillac, and she ain't a Rolls... I just used the cheap NOCO stuff from Amazon and I was pleasantly surprised with the results. I covered the floor and rear cab wall with the stuff.

Truck has a steel inner roof, offroad tires, no A/C and glasspacks... its never going to be all that quiet.
 

broncobowsher

Adventurer
Got a box of the 200mil pads. Cut them in thirds or quarters. Put them on the larger sections of panels in the van. Close to half of it on the roof between the roof bows (the bows act as dampers on there own).
Packed the sidewalls in rockwool, except the thin spots (behind the factory hardboard)
Best thing was splurging on a roll of 60mm Thinsulate. That went in a thin spot behind the factory hardboard and the roof from the windshield to the back doors. Dang that thing got quiet. Speeding ticket capable type of quiet. Solar panel noise is gone (not that the flat panels had that much to start with). Biggest noise now is the slide door window blank. It is the only large sheetmetal panel remaining. Sounds a little like an open window or a door not fully closed. That is the next part of making it quiet.

When I do the floors I will box in the wheel wells so I can pack in a load of Thinsulate in there as well. Inside will get a heavy stone guard coating as well.
 

dierkz

Member
She ain't a Cadillac, and she ain't a Rolls... I just used the cheap NOCO stuff from Amazon and I was pleasantly surprised with the results. I covered the floor and rear cab wall with the stuff.

Truck has a steel inner roof, offroad tires, no A/C and glasspacks... its never going to be all that quiet.
Alright, we'll check that out. My uncle got this F150 long bed project as their weekend travel vehicle. We'll do the bed conversion after its return from exhaust and nitto ridge grappler tires installation plus alignment.
 

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