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Well, I am thinking of getting this done while COVID keeps us locked away.  

I would prefer a no odour solution so Asphalt products might not be a choice.

Names like Dynamite, Hushmat, Ballistic, Noico, butyl membrane, asphalt it goes on.  

Then thickness of all sorts of levels,  so if that 2.1millimeters its probably a 80mil. 

Also they have a 6+mil foil with butyl backing. 

False info on the web is all over. 

I have seen a Hushmat video where the guy sprays the pan with wd-40 before install and says his product is better as it will glue even if wd-40 is on the door compared to  Ballistic which won't glue.  The question I asked myself is when you glue something down you make sure it is clean and you prepare the spot with alcohol.  If oil comes after what does it matter?  I guess I might have to buy Vodka to clean the inside of the doors.  

 

Any comments on doing the doors only...

Last edited by IaM-Ray
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I've used Bituthene membrane roofing. Comes in various thicknesses (2000,3000,4000). Way cheaper than sound matting which appears to be the same material. Be warned, once you peel off the back and stick it, it will not move. There is no repositioning it.  The only other problem is getting a small amount of it.  It is usually sold in huge rolls, but the roofing supply stores have been able to cut me 10 feet.

The only advantage to doing the doors is that it gives them a nicer "thunk" sound when closed.  Sound isn't going to be blocked with an open top or side curtains.

-=theron

The doors on my new Spyder "thunk" nicely. On the old car, they were very light, and you needed to keep your hand on them when you shut them, or the latch would bounce off the pin and not latch.

I believe the doors are made of thicker glass now, plus the inside has truck bedliner material on it. MUCH better.

You might try that, or the roof stuff, that works too.

I took the “el Cheapo” route on my car as I did all of the work on it years before I ever discovered this group.  And what did el Señor del Cheapo use?

Shop floor mat material from Home Depot.  It is a little over 3/8” thick, smooth on one side and textured on the other, made of closed cell foam and easily cut to any shape you need with a utility knife.  I put it almost everywhere - under the carpet, under the rear seat, inside the doors, everywhere.  

I glued it in with 3M upholstery adhesive or contact cement, depending on horizontal or vertical surfaces, but it goes in well and works great.  Doors close with a definite “thunk” and road noise is very low (although the wind noise is still there).

Lane Anderson posted:

I used B-Quiet, which is a cheaper substitute for Dynamat.  The door sounded much more solid, but it’ll never have that heavy “thunk!” because it’s just too light.

Back when I upgraded the carpet in my VS, I coated my floor with truck bed liner for waterproofing then applied real Dynamat  to the floors inside the doors, all in the front trunk area and everywhere else carpet would go, and closing my door does have that million dollar "Thunk".  I highly recommend Dynamat.  If I were having a car built I would speck Dynamat so it goes in as the car is being built.  Great stuff.  Didn't know about B-Quiet or the other one that Gordon has mentioned. If I had it to do again I'd look at all possible choices because Dynamat is quite expensive.  

Frankie Valley, would have done the whole door skin, see what I did there  but the theory from this guy is you only really need to do 25% of the outside skin of the door. 

Plus what he does on the inner panel, to get good deadening.

yellow ... 

"This is what CLD Tile™ placement would look like if the outr door skin was trans[partent and the CLD Tiles™ were yellow. The black areas are steel structures inside the door. The blue patch is the only stock vibration damper on the outer door skin. This is plenty to take the sheet metal from steel drum to non-resonant and solid."

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Here is quote from the site Frankie gave us... There is hope for us  

Convertible Considerations

I used to believe it wasn't possible to make much improvement in any convertible. Then I had an opportunity to work on about a dozen Pontiac Solstice/Saturn Sky roadsters. I only worked on the first one with the understanding that I expected no improvement. The owner was desperate because his wife wouldn't get in the car after all of his performance mods.

We worked through the car and the result was stunning. 90 MPH on Route 95, top down and we could speak in just slightly raised voices. Top up and it was a nicely quiet car. One owner thought there was something wrong with his car after treatment - until he realized he was hearing the ticking of an analog alarm clock he had in a gym bag in the car.

This does not mean that every convertible can be made quiet. If the dominant noise with the top down is air turbulence, treating the car isn't going to help. If the dominant sounds with the top up are air turbulence and top noise, treatment won't help. If the car has decent aerodynamics, the convertible top was designed to be quiet and most of what you hear is engine, exhaust and tire/wheel noise, there's a good chance for a good outcome

Well I can now update on the door insulation.

FYI,  I could not seem to easily get any of the standard sound stuff with COVID delivery in 100 days but was able to get Buzzmat from a local speedshop who have been using it for years with good results, so I decided to use it.  I tried my best on the passenger door and then got the drivers side done is half the time.  

Thanks to @vegas356 for the link to that site, as it encouraged me to not go crazy and I essentially did the outside door panel as much as I could apply securely.  

I think it will do for my purpose considering I have no speakers in the door and the doors were the last things uninsulated.

Man that stuff is sticky.

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