rubberoid

  • Thread starter Thread starter chessrock
  • Start date Start date
C

chessrock

Banned
I received a tip recently from a friend/colleague regarding what he considers to be a great material to be used in the accoustic treatment of a project studio . . . rubberoid. Apparently just very cheap, long sheets of rubber material commonly used by roofers.


Anyone else familiar with the material?

What in the heck would it be used for? Absorption? Isolation? Both?
 
Never heard of that name - Are you sure it isn't a method of birth control used by Androids?

Seriously, can you find out more? If it's used on roofs, I would doubt its usefulness in treatment (too thin) but it might have other uses (besides birth control :=)
 
I have no idea.

I suppose you could attach a bunch of sprinklers on either side, wax it up with some Crisco baking grease, and it would make for a cool "slip 'n slide ! !" :D

"wwwwweeeeeeeee"
 
I know a ton about this stuff. I used to formulate commercial roofing products for a competitor of GAF the manufacturer of "ruberoid". I learned quite a bit about their commercial product lines. These types of products are basically comprised of a thin sheet of reinforcement made of either fiberglass or polyester. This sheet is ran through a molten-hot mixture of asphalt and modifiers. The modifiers generally consist of Styrene Butadiene Styrene (SBS) rubber or plastic (either atactic polypropylene or isotactic polypropylene). There is usually a certain amount of calcium or magnesium carbonate in the formulation that serves as a filler. The coated sheet is then ran through a water bath to cool. The thickness of the material is typically 4mm.

I suspect that the CaCO3 aids in sound absorption because it tends to make the product weigh more/unit of volume. This would reduce vibration. I read an article about this before starting construction on my studio. I read where it was recommended that it be placed wherever a top or bottom plate touches the external structure. Since I had excellent access to this material, I decided to implement this idea.

I had to decide on whether or not to use APP or SBS because the SBS polymer is more flexible and there is typically more CaCO3 in the formulation. However, it is difficult to find an SBS sheet that is 4mm thick of just modified asphalt. Typically, the modified thickness is something like 3mm, and the rest of the thickness is made up in the form of granules. I ultimately decided on the plastic modified version (APP) over SBS because I could get 4mm of pure modified asphalt without granules.
 
Darwin.... so what you're saying is......."you've never heard of it"! :D

Great info!
RF
 
i saw this stuff at menard's the other day and was wondering the same thing. could it be a cheap alternative to sheetblok? it's definitely cheap. it was like 60 bucks for a huge roll!
 
Back
Top