Headliner insulation ???
Headliner insulation ???
OK, I have the fatmat down on the floor pans, package tray and the back seat panel. Now I am wanting to know if anyone has used the fatmat on the roof?? Under the headliner, I took it down to bare metal and plan to paint with Zerorust. Just want to know if the fatmat will stay there once i get it in??
Thanks, Mark
Thanks, Mark
Mark I hope you find an answer to your question.
I have been wanting to know what to use myself.
I scraped off the paperlike material from the factory
because it was just disintegrating anyway.
It will have to be very thin whatever we use, yes?
I have been wanting to know what to use myself.
I scraped off the paperlike material from the factory
because it was just disintegrating anyway.
It will have to be very thin whatever we use, yes?
Where I dive my car, I'm more worried about thermal insulation on the roof. I put fatmat on the floor, firewall, doors, etc... but I just left the original insulation on the roof. On 100 degree days you'll be more concerned about heat radiating off that more than noise.
Gary,
My original insulation was coming off due to a pinhole under the vinyl roof. So, my daughter and I spent yesterday afternoon scraping it all off and cleaning the residue. I plan to paint with zero rust and then use the fatmat as sound and heat insulation.
My original insulation was coming off due to a pinhole under the vinyl roof. So, my daughter and I spent yesterday afternoon scraping it all off and cleaning the residue. I plan to paint with zero rust and then use the fatmat as sound and heat insulation.
http://www.chevelles.com/forums/showthread.php?t=161372
Last edited by Gary's 2 442-S; Dec 19, 2012 at 05:36 PM.
Remember that the factory material was really there to deaden the large expanse of sheet metal and prevent "drumming."
If you want to use a lighter foam or fluffy insulation, you will need a "mass" insulation like FatMat or asphalt underneath, to keep the sheetmetal from drumming.
- Eric
If you want to use a lighter foam or fluffy insulation, you will need a "mass" insulation like FatMat or asphalt underneath, to keep the sheetmetal from drumming.
- Eric
The original anti-drumming material was an asphalt-coated paper.
Perhaps the asphalt compound wasn't the same thing as what's under your tires, but it was made of petrochemical cracking dregs, or asphalt.
- Eric
Perhaps the asphalt compound wasn't the same thing as what's under your tires, but it was made of petrochemical cracking dregs, or asphalt.
- Eric
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