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Help wanted: Soundproofing and installing small upgrades (Lynnwood, WA)
I purchased the OEM Audio + system with the amp, sub, and tweeters, as well as an OEM backup camera for my BRZ. I also want some sound-deadening on the car, but I don't have a place or the time right now to do the job myself. I went to a few shops for estimates, but none of them were too promising.
Right now, I'm considering buying a set up sound deadening materials from www.sounddeadenershowdown.com if I can find a shop to install outside materials, or can find a helping hand. Anyways, I'm wondering if I can get suggestions on good shops that would install these things, or if anybody with experience would like to help me out. My budget is around $2-2.5k including materials, and haven't purchased any sound-deadening materials yet. I can go as far as Portland, OR or Vancouver, BC. Thank you in advance! |
Have you tried Car Toys yet? They always seem to have a good head on their shoulders, it has been a while since I visited.
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I don't know how deep you want to get with deadening but I did my own install on sub and deck and a half assed job of deadening in my trunk. I ain't great but can help out.
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This is the best estimate I got so far:
"$1500+ tax. And here is a list of what product we would use :72 sq ft of stinger expert road kill, 36 sq ft of a mixture of stinger carpet pad (goes under carpet) and overkill (1/4 dense foam pad)" @Jdex420 honestly at this point I'm just considering having a shop do all the work, or it's gotta be someone who owns a shop or at least work in one. Thank you though |
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A professional sound deadening install is expensive because it's extremely labor intensive. You're better off DIY. Take your time. Going one area of the car at a time over weeks/months. Just make sure to measure the ambient sound pressures before and after so you know what your gains were.
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How long? Well, like I said, extremely labor intensive because a person has to go slow as to not mar any of the interior bits as they're un-installing/re-installing them. Also to press CLD tiles fully with the roller. Lastly to make sure the MLV has full complete coverage (even small gaps can leak lots of sound). The work isn't difficult, it's just labor intensive. A novice can do it, if they can commit the time and better yet, if they have a friend to help. That's why I recommend a slow roll approach. My personal opinion about the kit listed is that it covers areas that aren't fully necessary (like the trunk) which is 14.8 ft² MLV and 14.8 ft² 1/8" CCF. After all, who's riding in the trunk? Whos' ears are back there? I would just CLD the trunk for vibration and then make sure to get really good MLV, CCF coverage on the rear seat back and seal the cabin like a vault. That removes a lot of weight, time, and cost from the project. TL:DR Sorry got sidetracked, to answer your question about the full kit. Realistically, I'd say it would take a brand new mechanic 20-30 hours to install the kit alone and properly. Novice DIY with a buddy and the time could be cut down to 16-20 hours. A pro could probably do it in 10-16 at their shop. At $70 / hr. that's $700 - $1120 in labor + materials for the job. To me, that looked like $1000 in parts, gadgets, or money in the bank. To others,it's a waste of time. To each their own :thumbsup: |
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Keep in mind that if you're sensitive to road noise or just don't like a loud car, then don't delete your rear seat without putting some form of barrier or seat delete kit back there (like this). Reason being that the shape of the trunk area creates a sort of a corner load or spatial load situation that makes sound really boom from back there. |
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