Agent WD-40
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 23, 2014
- Posts
- 115
- Reaction score
- 27
I spent the last two days putting some Dynamat Extreme down in my Yukon Denali. My first impressions on this projects are very positive.
My goal was to quiet things down without tearing the interior apart to do it. I've gutted the interior to lay dynamat in other vehicles and didn't want to do this on this project. I wanted to follow the 80/20 rule here. 80% improvement for 20% of the work. I definitely feel I achieved this.
I didn't remove the seats or the carpet. Everything I laid down on the floor of the vehicle I was able to reach under the carpet and stick down. I pulled up a few of the trim pieces on the door sills/rear cargo door to reach under the carpet.
For the doors I did have the remove all of the interior door panels (including the tailgate panel). I also remove the moisture barrier to get access to the inside skin of the door. I didn't replace
Here is what I noticed:
Here are the areas I covered (see red outlines on attached pictures for another view of my coverage):
One last tip. If you want Dynamat Extreme check out the 36 sq ft bulk pack on Amazon. It is a great price per sq ft and comes with free shipping (shipping alone would probably be $50 otherwise).
My goal was to quiet things down without tearing the interior apart to do it. I've gutted the interior to lay dynamat in other vehicles and didn't want to do this on this project. I wanted to follow the 80/20 rule here. 80% improvement for 20% of the work. I definitely feel I achieved this.
I didn't remove the seats or the carpet. Everything I laid down on the floor of the vehicle I was able to reach under the carpet and stick down. I pulled up a few of the trim pieces on the door sills/rear cargo door to reach under the carpet.
For the doors I did have the remove all of the interior door panels (including the tailgate panel). I also remove the moisture barrier to get access to the inside skin of the door. I didn't replace
Here is what I noticed:
- There is much less road and wind noise. It reduced some of the tire "slap" when hitting expansion joints in the road. The vehicle didn't become an isolation chamber but it did knock everything down a few notches. I would say it is similar to the 2008-2012 Buick Enclave but not as quiet as the 2013+ Enclave.
- I'm pleased that all of the outside noises went down in proportion- it didn't just reduce tire noise which all of the sudden made the remaining wind noise much more obvious and annoying.
- I completed the floor on the first day and the doors on the second. With just the floor done it did make the noise coming in through the doors more pronounced. Finishing the doors balanced everything back out.
- It seems the intake rumble has been reduced some - not drastically, but a little more subdued. I have an Airaid JR intake with the factory filter/airbox.
- The doors have a more satisfying and solid closing sound to them.
- The bass hits a bit harder to me. I'm not sure if this is because there is less background noise so I hear the bass better or what. For this round I did not replace the moisture barrier with Dynamat which I know from prior experience improves the bass output significantly.
Here are the areas I covered (see red outlines on attached pictures for another view of my coverage):
- As much of the cargo area as I could. Here I lifted up the rear sill cover and reached under the carpet. I didn't cover every square foot under this area. I targeted the areas that sounded the most hollow when I knocked on them.
- I put Dynamat down in the drives side rear wheel well area (where the jack is stored). I was able to access this by removing the cupholder/jack access cover. I didn't lay any Dynamat down in the rear passenger side wheel well area because the rear AC unit is stuffed in there.
- Under the 2nd row seats. I put Dynamat up to about where the 2nd row passengers feat would land. The area under the feet had some vibration dampener from the factory down already and it was difficult to reach without more disassembly than I wanted.I was able to access this area from the split in the carpet that runs between the 2nd row seats and cargo area.
- In the front drivers and passenger foot-well area. This had some of the same factory vibration dampener on the floor already but I still put Dynamat down on top of this. I covered the floor from the from of the seat bottoms to where the floorboard started to curve up toward the firewall.
- All 4 doors and the tailgate. I covered the inside surface of the exterior sheet metal. I left the factory moisture barriers in place for now. I will probably go back and replace the moisture barrier with Dynamat in the future. though.
- I think I used around 60 sq ft of Dynamat (just shy of 2 full bulk packs)
One last tip. If you want Dynamat Extreme check out the 36 sq ft bulk pack on Amazon. It is a great price per sq ft and comes with free shipping (shipping alone would probably be $50 otherwise).
Attachments
Last edited: