Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Sound Deadening to the Gluteus Maximus

Now get ready for a modern marvel of advanced engineering. Imagine how sweet it'd be if these cars shipped with this stuff. So you might be tempting yourself to call this Dynamat because you've heard of it and you think they are the only ones clever enough to make this stuff. Well, let me enlighten you. Because my restoration budget did not facilitate spending $250 for a square foot of Dynamat, I harnessed the power of the web and found something just as good at significant cost savings. After doing my research I found this stuff at $14 for a 25' x 6" roll. The savings, I decided, would mean that I'd have to do more work, but as you may or may not be able to decipher by now, I'm always game for some real work.

Armed with my handy-dandy electrician scissors and a razor knife (don't use regular scissors on this stuff, you'll dull them out and trash your hands in an instantaneous instant) I charged up that great mountainous beast and laid down the law! I even went a step further and added some pieces of yute backed material under the front and rear seats. Take a close peek at the last two photogs.

Sound deadenation (yes, it's a word now) has been realized to signficant audible suppression detection spanning the full audio spectrum. Whatever than means. In layman's terms, I could tell the difference between before and after. So much so that I would recommend this upgrade if you are considering doing this to your vehicle. It will work on any type or make or model of car and you will be very happy with the results. In addition, if you are the person that drives a "boom-boom car" that does more rattling than boom-booming, use this stuff. You will be happy and so will we and so will your car.

Feast your eyes, take a peek, send me a question or comment.






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