Interior and Upholstery Sound deadening fox interior questions

AnthonyA1234

Active Member
Aug 17, 2020
469
46
38
Florida
Going to order some Kilmat to apply throughout my fox interior. I had a couple questions I wanted to ask you guys.

First off, what did you guys do regarding all of the wires above the floor board in the car? How do you work around that? See pics below.

Secondly, I already removed most of the stuck on factory deadning already but I still have that foam deadner that just sits on top. Once I put the kilmat can I throw that away? Or should I leave it?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_9240.jpeg
    IMG_9240.jpeg
    719.2 KB · Views: 39
  • IMG_9241.jpeg
    IMG_9241.jpeg
    1,002.8 KB · Views: 34
  • IMG_9243.jpeg
    IMG_9243.jpeg
    940.1 KB · Views: 35
  • IMG_9244.jpeg
    IMG_9244.jpeg
    655.3 KB · Views: 35
  • Sponsors (?)


I used a panel popping tool and got the wiring off the floor board. Laid the dynomat down then located the holes and cut the dynomat away and reinstalled the wiring harnesses.

I reinstalled the pieces of automotive carpet jute padding which is what I believe you are calling “foam”. This is also glued to the back of the carpet.
 
I used a panel popping tool and got the wiring off the floor board. Laid the dynomat down then located the holes and cut the dynomat away and reinstalled the wiring harnesses.

I reinstalled the pieces of automotive carpet jute padding which is what I believe you are calling “foam”. This is also glued to the back of the carpet.
Got it. Where did you apply the dynamat? I’m wondering other worthwhile places to put it besides the floor.
 
Doors, trunk lid, cargo floor, trans tunnel, floor panels, firewall, and if you're feeling [really] squirrely, between the roof and headliner.

The cool part is that you don't have to cover every square inch of [any] of those areas to get the effect.

You can leave openings where there are troublesome artifacts in the way. It makes [zero] difference.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users
Doors, trunk lid, cargo floor, trans tunnel, floor panels, firewall, and if you're feeling [really] squirrely, between the roof and headliner.

The cool part is that you don't have to cover every square inch of [any] of those areas to get the effect.

You can leave openings where there are troublesome artifacts in the way. It makes [zero] difference.
For the doors I’m going to want to put the dynamat inside the panel through the access holes so that it’s on the inside of the exterior metal correct?
 
I did the same as Aerocoupe, popped the wiring up, laid the mat down and popped the clip back into place.

Only the main tub was done in my car, from the firewall to the rear seat. Butyl mat covered in CCF. Some butyl mat was placed on the outer/inner door skins and CCF was applied directly to the door panels. Tremendous difference in road noise.
 
did the dynomat on the 86 T Top and it made a world of difference. Used dry ice to remove the factory sound deadener and a wire wheel to clean the floors, then I POR15 everything, then installed the Kilmat. Half way through the install on my 90 vert. Bought 2 boxes on Amazon for like $60 and still have plenty left
 

Attachments

  • 20231217_160423.jpg
    20231217_160423.jpg
    712.2 KB · Views: 22
  • 20231229_140235.jpg
    20231229_140235.jpg
    493.4 KB · Views: 23
  • 20231229_140243.jpg
    20231229_140243.jpg
    557.3 KB · Views: 22
  • 20231229_142552.jpg
    20231229_142552.jpg
    543.7 KB · Views: 23
  • 20231229_151834.jpg
    20231229_151834.jpg
    358.2 KB · Views: 22
  • 20231229_160403.jpg
    20231229_160403.jpg
    617 KB · Views: 21
  • 20231229_160416.jpg
    20231229_160416.jpg
    502.8 KB · Views: 23
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users
You do not need 100% coverage with the sound deadener. That's a huge misconception. The material adds mass to the panel and changes it's resonance so you don't need that much to do so. However, everyone, including myself, go for 100% coverage.

I went around the wires. I trimmed the sound deadener to just go up to the wires and then cut a piece to go on the opposite side. I also used some Noico 150mil foam around the trans tunnel to cut down on heat. I put as much of the OE sound insulator back as I could, and I'm running an OEM carpet.
IMG_4111.jpeg

IMG_3693.jpeg

IMG_3731.jpeg

IMG_3760.jpeg
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users