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Re: How 'bout those burning feet?

To: "BJ8Healeys" <sbyers@ec.rr.com>, <healeys@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: How 'bout those burning feet?
From: m.brouillette@comcast.net
Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 23:15:09 +0000
The difference is Dynamat is just the lightweight elastomeric butyl and no 
aluminum layer.


> Hi, Mike -
> 
> I wouldn't swear that the stuff I tried to use was "Dynamat", but my
> recollection is that that was the brand name of what I bought at the local
> auto parts store.  It has been a few years, and my memory certainly isn't what
> it used to be, so I could be mistaken.
> Another thing I remember is that it was quite expensive for a 3' x 4' piece.
> 
> Is there a difference in material and construction between "Dynamat" and
> "Dynamat Extreme"?
> 
> Steve Byers
> HBJ8L/36666
> BJ8 Registry
> Havelock, NC  USA
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
>   From: m.brouillette@comcast.net
>   To: BJ8Healeys ; healeys@autox.team.net
>   Sent: Monday, July 18, 2005 5:32 PM
>   Subject: Re: How 'bout those burning feet?
> 
> 
>   Steve,
> 
>                What you used couldn't have been Dynamat.  They have no felt.
> It's rubber and foil.
> 
>   Mike Brouillette
>   59 Bt7
> 
> 
> 
>   From their website...
> 
>   www.dynamat.com
> 
>   Dynamat Xtreme is a patented, lightweight elastomeric butyl and aluminum
> constrained-layer vibrational damper. Dynamat Xtreme conforms and fuses easily
> to sheet metal and other hard substrates. Material performance is optimized
> for temperature ranges between 140F and 1400F (-100C to +600C). Material can
> withstand temperature extremes between -650F and +3000F (-540C to +1490C) and
> is highly resistant to aging.
> 
>   Appearance:
>   Black butyl based core with 4 mil aluminum constrain layer, craft paper
> release liner
> 
>   Thickness:
>   0.067" (1.7mm)
> 
> 
> 
>   > Hi, Doug -
>   >
>   > I tried using Dynamat, which is a felt material faced with aluminum foil,
> but
>   > I found the foil very delicate and vulnerable to damage, and the loosely
>   > packed felt made a mess when trying to glue it down.  A much better
> solution
>   > is the 1/4" thick double aluminized Mylar-faced plastic bubblewrap
> insulation.
>   > I found this in a local building supply store.  It's easy to cut and fit
> into
>   > place (make a paper template first), and very durable.
>   >
>   > After sealing all the air leaks in the firewall, insulating my floors with
> the
>   > bubblewrap, and covering both sides of the fiberglass transmission tunnel
> with
>   > the same stuff, my BJ8 is no hotter in the cockipit than any other car
> without
>   > air conditioning.  Before I did this, one summer the heel of my
> accelerator
>   > pedal shoe melted!
>   >
>   > Happy Healeying!
>   > Steve Byers
>   > HBJ8L/36666
>   > BJ8 Registry
>   > Havelock, NC  USA




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