Sound Deadening

Canks

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Joined
Jul 28, 2022
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Lake Havasu
The wife has been spoiled by cruising the dirt in a second gen Raptor in recent years. I got frustrated with how slow it was in the rough and didn’t really enjoy beating up an expensive truck, so I sold it. Problem is the wife no longer wants to be in a vehicle that is not as quiet or comfortable. So I wanted to start a discussion regarding noise deadening/quieting down the interior of a prerunner.

Couple themes:

  • This is assuming no headsets. They obviously solve almost all of these problems, but headsets on a road trip suck. And honestly its nice to cruise without headsets on too.
  • Body on frame vehicle build with a cage (I’m sure some of the ideas discussed would work on a tube chassis, but I assume most all of us cannot afford a full tab chassis setup)
  • Priorities: Safety, reliability, comfort, speed. Unfortunately in order to get the fam to want to come out more I need to check my ego and prioritize comfort way before speed.
  • This is in a fully sealed cab with windows.
  • Please rate things in a 1 to 10.
    • 1 = not worth it
    • 10 = Mercedes sound level
  • Assume the vehicle is running bypasses

1. Peel and stick sound deadening, with no other interior. This is what I would say I see as the most common setup on garage built prerunners. Did this change your comfort level in the vehicle? 1 to 10 how much of a difference did it make?

1a. Please note how much you put in the vehicle (ie:floor, rear wall, fire wall, ceiling, doors etc.

2. Wrapping the tube in sound deadening material, worth it or no? 1 to 10?

3. Isolating the cab cage on bushings from the rest of the chassis, worth it? 1 to 10? Note: cab cage can not have any metal to metal contact anywhere or you will negate your effort to bushing mount your cage

3a. When using isolation bushings, do you run urethane? Or something softer like an oem leaf spring bushing?

4. Bushing mount the upper shock eye of your bypasses? Effective? 1 to 10?

5. Bushing mount your entire upper shock mounts, effective? 1 to 10?

6. Bushing mount your suspension arm pivots. Obviously this opens up the situation for increase wear, deflection, and bushing squeak. But all OEM’s that I can think of bushing mount the suspension pivots front and rear. Worth it for road noise and isolation?

7. Interior plastics and carpet, I assume this is self explanatory. But how much better is an interior with it vs. without 1 to 10?

8. If we are going for ultimate comfort, is it worth it ditch the bypasses all together. Could you make a very quiet interior without bypass noise carrying in to the cage?

8a. Perhaps a big internal bypass coilover is the ticket?

8b. Does anybody make a large coilover that we normal people can buy? Bigger than 3” (not RG)
  • Is this a dumb questions because of the price of springs?
9. What tips or tricks am I missing that are worth mentioning?

10. Honestly, how quiet can you get the interior of a real fully caged prerunner?
 
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1. I used kilmat on my whole roof, rear firewall, and backseat area floor. Made a big difference in outside noise, and also eliminated almost all exhaust noise in the cab (which I dont like). This also made the bypass clicking exponentially louder inside. So much so that I’m seriously considering #8 on your list and going to 3.0 smoothies instead of the 3.0 bypasses I have now.

2. Haven’t tried this but you’ve got me thinking it might help with the bypass noise. You would probably have to wrap the entire cab cage to be effective in my mind.
3, 4, 5, yes
7. Definitely helps the more stock interior you can put back in with a cage.
8b. Yes, King makes a 3.5 coilover and yes the springs are silly expensive

9/10. You can get them fairly quiet. Just depends how much work you want to do. But I think the bypass clicking will always be the main annoyance, at least with King’s. They are the loudest of the bunch. Doing a full interior with lots of carpet and the tube work all wrapped and hidden under foam and material will be the best insurance.
 
3, 4, 5, yes

Any first hand experience with any of these? I've seen pics, but haven't seen it on any of the luxury prerunners. Which makes me question it.
Makes sense that it is better, but is it significant, or just better? Any negatives once the original work is done?
 
Not personally but some guys on here do. Charlie Brown and BrandonMiller both have bushing mounted roll cages. I’ve only ever seen bushing mounted shocks on random trucks and in pictures over the years
 
When I first built my truck I was trying hard to maintain a comfortable, quite ride. I've since given up and bought headsets since the more I built it the more unbearable it became. The rear trailing arms were the biggest surprise noise maker, then the 9" gearset and floater hubs just compounded it. I'm convinced it is the hiems transferring the bulk of the noise and am going to rebuild uppers with a bushing on the cab side to see if it helps. Polyurethane takes so much maintenance to stay greased and quiet though. I've also gone down the rabbit hole of designing bushing mounted link mounts and upper shock mounts but haven't been convince they will help much. I've essentially built a unibody at this point so all noise transfers into the cab.

I once worked at a vibration test lab and built a fixture to test what frequencies different rubbers would transmit through. It fizzled out when trying to isolate the frequencies in my truck as the cacophony of noise was impossible to analyze. I still have it if anybody has access to bolt it down and run a sine sweep through it.
 
... Polyurethane takes so much maintenance to stay greased and quiet though. I've also gone down the rabbit hole of designing bushing mounted link mounts and upper shock mounts but haven't been convince they will help much. I've essentially built a unibody at this point so all noise transfers into the cab.

I kind of had a soft OEM leaf spring bushing in mind to use to isolate the cab cage. My experience with the OEM leaf spring bushings is that they last a long time and require zero maintenance. Im assuming they are relatively soft as well. Enough bushing connections should keep the cab cage rigid enough and allow the chassis to flex a bit as well. Just assumptions though.
 
Great thread, Ive been wanting to replace my Com9-T bearings on my FOA smooth body R.R. rear shocks on Daily F-150. The bearings had play and were squeaking and was being transferred into a stock unmolested cab. I used an Energy 9.8107R and a 5/8” OD x 1/2” ID shock bushing sleeves. I want to try it on my bypasses in my fully caged ranger next, if these hold up.image.jpgimage.jpg
 
i have tried to keep the noise down to a tolerable level. short drives its good (2 hours). on longer drives or on a baja run with a group i like the head sets. it gives me options and it is easier to talk on the 2-way.

as far as build goes. my cab is bushing mounted. it gets tricky but i do still have a solid mount tube in a few spots to cut down the flex. i know that they will take most of the flex kinda like a torsion bar so i put them in a spot that can be inspected and a easy cut if i remove the cab.

inside i used the lizard skin/second coat 1st. manly for heat transfer and as a water proofer. it give me piece of mind knowing its A+ fire rated.
then i used a layer of a sound deadiner. over that i put a layer of the foam type sound. both came from kilmat.

i currently have one set of bypasses (on the front i went with one 3.0 ). on the rear i run say a way and the way they do the by-passes is different so i don't get the king clicking.
my head liner is made out of 3" foam. I cover the tube work with roll cage foam and cut the 3" foam to piece it in between. it helps a little and gives way more protection on my head.

it all helps in there own way. i think the ones with the most improvement made was the bushing mount cab, the clickers on the by-passes, the type of bushings for motor/trans mount. head sets for an option. i am not sure why but the head sets hurt my ears for some reason so i will not use them once in a while plus i can hear how the truck is running better.

if you want to run your truck like a race truck, you get race truck noise.
 
If your looking for good sound detoning check out a company called "Second skin" ive got a box of 18 or 20 sheets 10in x 12in and it covered all of my 05 Sierra crew cab
 
I’ve also been looking into options for myself, not sure what works the best but also I’m concerned with the overall aesthetic. I’ve seen some guys use hydro turf on the floors and it looks cool.. but with all the sound deadening materials I’ve seen have these chrome logos blasted all over the cab, does anyone know if any of the options don’t have logos?
 
hahah when did we all become so old...

i 2nd what @charlie brown said about the headsets hurting my ears, great at reducing noise but they hurt after a while.
I want to add some sound deadening to my fraptor soon, and re route the exhaust to a side exit because its dumped under the cab and sucks now.
 
Here’s how I would rank sound-reducing strategies in order of effectiveness and what I would do next time if auditory comfort was the most important factor:

1: soft urethane bushing mount the cage with no cab-to-cage tie-ins. Full fucking 90’s style.

2: large IBPs instead of external tube bypasses. If 69 tube bypasses are absolutely mandatory, swayaway or fox instead of king.

3. Stock motor and trans mounts. Weld a safety chain like the rock donkey guys for when they break.

4. Urethane Bushings at upper bypass mounts

5. Urethane bushings at frame-side trailing arm pivots. 3-link wishbone on urethane bushings at frame side.

6. Dynamat/KilMat/peelNseal everywhere

7. Full interior with carpet, factory-style batting insulation, and headliner with foam between the roof tubes like @charlie brown and others.

8. Urethane Upper and lower a-arm frame-side pivots. Grease zerks at all urethane pivots—front and rear—so squeaks can be kept at bay

9. I talked to a dude at the DR bro taco jump fest that had covered his cage tubes with kilmat. He said it didn’t help at all. Most the noise I hear from my 5-tube kings just transfers thru the roof tubes directly into my fucking ears. I’d wrap them in multiple layers of sound deadener, then hide them above a well-insulated headliner.

10. Tin work attached in MANY places with whatever fasteners suit your fancy and sprayed with bedliner. I have KilMat on my 1/8” underbelly skidplates because they vibrate like crazy from the solid motor and trans mounts.

11. Stock-style mufflers and rubber exhaust hangers

12. Quiet tires with good street & dirt manners like BFG all terrains
 
Here’s how I would rank sound-reducing strategies in order of effectiveness and what I would do next time if auditory comfort was the most important factor:.

4. Urethane Bushings at upper bypass mount
Have you, or anyone youve seen, tried an urethane bushing upper on a shock that gets beat on? Do they actually hold up?
 
Have you, or anyone youve seen, tried a urethane bushing upper on a shock that gets beat on? Do they actually hold up?
@dose has done it. His truck gets tons of dirt miles, but he doesn’t drive as angrily and as full of hate as I do….

I recently McMastered various Urethane durometwrs so I could experiment with it, but I haven’t machined the uniball replacement bushings & sleeves yet. Maybe this summer.
 
I’ve also been looking into options for myself, not sure what works the best but also I’m concerned with the overall aesthetic. I’ve seen some guys use hydro turf on the floors and it looks cool.. but with all the sound deadening materials I’ve seen have these chrome logos blasted all over the cab, does anyone know if any of the options don’t have logos?
I run this in my exploder and it is exactly comparable to kilmat but black and without all those logos. Unbelievable how much quieter it made my interior. Obviously this exact part is unavailable but hopefully there are other options. Highly recommend
 

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hahah when did we all become so old...

i 2nd what @charlie brown said about the headsets hurting my ears, great at reducing noise but they hurt after a while.
I want to add some sound deadening to my fraptor soon, and re route the exhaust to a side exit because its dumped under the cab and sucks now.
As they say, "With age comes knowledge".
I love loud exhausts, and all of my friends will tell you this. I need it loud. But, I have learned that droning is junk and undercab/axle dump/ even sidepipes are no good. If at all possible try and route it to the back to get the smells and volume out back. So worth it
 
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