That's the smallest lot you can get?
They come on bundles here, (bags really) of 20 to the bag. That's the smallest lot I can get, but, the stuffs pretty heavy, and it has a large girth, it costs a lot to ship.
I guarantee that you can get it in any major city. You don’t have to buy it from Owens Corning. Owens Corning won’t even bother talking to you unless you’re buying a truckload.
Call Knauf and find their local distributor. They make the same product.
Shipping a bag of 2" RFSB is gonna cost a ton of money. It comes in a bag 2' x2' x4' long.
How close are you to Cinncinati or other large industrial centers? 3lb density RFSB is used a lot in industrial apps so somebody out there should have a stock of it.
I had to make a lot of calls in Seattle, but I finally got hooked up by talking to the Knauf rep for the NW.
David- keep me posted on it, in the meantime I'm going to double up my efforts and see what I can find locally. Never looked for the Knauf stuff.
Thanks dudes!
Yah, look in the unexpected places. I finally found med-density board locally at a Fireplace/Insert install shop! (They also had a batch of stainless perf metal wall units left over from some theater gig they did they wanted to unload when I told them what the board was for.
Much later I ran across an industrial foam insulation shop that has fiber board.
C7's right.
It cost $1.25/sq.ft. So that's what... 10 bucks a sheet?
Talk to some AC installers too. They use ridgid fiberglass thats pretty dense.. and 1-2 inches thick for the supply and return air ducts comming right off the A/C unit.
Its foil backed, but you could make it work. This stuff comes in 4'x8' sheets! Its a little cheaper too. Just ask the supplier for the acoustic specs. Its actually pretty good stuff.
If ALL else fails; Ethan Winer sells and ships what you're looking for on his web-site.
I'm in WA state. You gotta call OC or Knauf and find out who their distibutors are out there. They gotta be peddling the their because it's a common material used in construction in any big metro area.
Cincy used to be industrialized. I guess those jobs went somewhere else.