1. If you are trying to keep heat inside the car. keep the reflective foil, it in that application it does not do an ideal job keeping it out
2. If you want sound inside not to reflected back down off the roof, or to be absorbed, best to remove the foil
3. If you remove the foil, until covered with a non-breathable material, your car inside will forever be exposed fiberglass particles for breathing and itching.
4. A foam is a better solution but has costs, possible burning issues and a limited lifespan.
5. Jute works well but is the heaviest
It does look nice.![]()
Yup your right it is a dense foam that looks like butyl.Packaging says it's made from foam.
That is unusual for duct insulation and a real plus here. I missed the "foam" behind the packaging reflection, my mistake.Packaging says it's made from foam.
Has anyone used the AMD insulation stuff on the floor boards or roof? I'm not there yet, but since my wife doesn't want me to add AC, I want max heat insulation for the roof/headliner & sound deadening.I just picked up some jute padding off Ebay for mine. A decent price at $19/yard and free shipping. In my case, I'm less concerned about heat, and more interested in sound-reduction.
View attachment 1927293
I just finished the process of cleaning up the roof, and letting the sun iron out the wrinkles in the headliner. Hopefully, I'll be breaking out the contact cement this weekend to install the jute.
Good luck on your project!
The inside of the trunk is painted, so I am trying to keep it clean in thereI dig the budget insulation approach, but the best part of this picture is the car is on a rotisserie but already has the trunk divider in place.
I have read threads of guys using thicker duct insulation on the floors and trunk divider, I will probably do that too instead of using dynamat again.Has anyone used the AMD insulation stuff on the floor boards or roof? I'm not there yet, but since my wife doesn't want me to add AC, I want max heat insulation for the roof/headliner & sound deadening.