sorry I'm confused on the difference between them? sound deadening the car next weekI've used many on the Reonix test list and can concure to a degree. The siless, 120m wasn't what was used in the test, and it is thick and effective but doesn't seem to stick as well. Overall, the NVX 90mil has been consistently a good product, applies well and sticks very well. IMHO, best bang for the buck currently offered.
I've used this for inside the door on the outer door panel:
I've used this for the rest of the car:
When considering all factors, this consistently comes out on top.
First link is a 3 layer with a closed cell foam layer. It acts as a squishy barrier between panels or other moving objects so they aren't slapping against eachother and make annoying noisessorry I'm confused on the difference between them? sound deadening the car next week
i see so CLD on both inner and outer doorskin and then the CCF on the door card? thats would make more sence to me but doxquzme said he put it on the outer doorpanelFirst link is a 3 layer with a closed cell foam layer. It acts as a squishy barrier between panels or other moving objects so they aren't slapping against eachother and make annoying noises
Second link is just butyl CLD, you'd put it on long flat panels to reduce how much they vibrate and lower the frequency at which they do vibrate.
Some companies have a tiles with an extra layer that is mass loaded vinyl. It blocks the transmission of sounds wherever you put it.
i see so CLD on both inner and outer doorskin and then the CCF on the door card? thats would make more sence to me but doxquzme said he put it on the outer doorpanel
i gotcha I gotcha so metal panels throw cld, and then som ccf on the door cards for any moving objectsWell your speakers are going to cause the most vibrations on the surface it's mounted in. I'm assuming he means the metal part when he says "outer" door panel where the speaker is mounted from the factory. Putting a tile or two on the door card is beneficial but not as necessary if we are talking about CLD by itself. As for the CCF, it just needs to be between the objects that are hitting each other, in this case you could mount it to one of the other (door card or metal panel) and it will have the same effect.
I actually have a set of this cheap CCF and it works great. But the triple layer stuff is definitely more convenient and it's thinner so you can fit it into tighter gaps
Exactlyoh wait its a CLD WITH a layer of foam?
Id say get a pack of that 3 layer stuff and use that on the door panels but also pick up a pack of CCF separately since it's cheap to hit areas you don't want to waste the CLD on. Basically you really want to focus on hitting the long flat portions with CLD first and foremost. Those are the parts that resonate the most and you can use what's left over to hit the less important parts.i gotcha I gotcha so metal panels throw cld, and then som ccf on the door cards for any moving objects
Im gonna use som resonix rope to line little stuff to
CLD won't cancel out sound it'll just reduce panel vibration. To eliminate sound entering the vehicle you'll need to use MLV over top of CCF to provide a limp sound barrier or something to absorb and dissipate the sound like Second Skins' melamine foam pads or the fiber mats from ResonixCheck out this stuff. I have this in my son's truck and the thicker stuff in mine. There's no difference in sound cancelling.
The first link is a cld/foam/foil product that takes care of vibration and reflected sound off the backs of the drivers toa degree and in the door cavity itself. It would go inside the door on the outer door panel.i see so CLD on both inner and outer doorskin and then the CCF on the door card? thats would make more sence to me but doxquzme said he put it on the outer doorpanel