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Green Glue is obscenely expensive.
I used (all to very good effect) insulated/lined flexible ductwork, staggered stud walls, and insulated fiberglass exterior door.The builder refused to "float" the drywall ceiling and six recessed light fixtures (rated air tight and to be in contact with insulation) were also installed. Even with blown insulation in the ceiling space, sound travels easily up and down.Double layer drywall will stiffen the walls which is good, but will do little to reduce sound transmission (unless you use some sort of non-hardening adhesive in between).
Quote from: ctviggen on 28 Oct 2009, 05:45 pmGreen Glue is obscenely expensive. GG is outrageous, I just added a second layer of drywall during a remodel of my listening room and couldn't bring my self to spend what it would have cost to use GG, used contractors glue and it seemed to come out just fine...
Instead of using Green Glue why not use ordinary adhesive silicon caulk? Who knows Green Glue might just be ordinary adhesive caulk colored green but with a price surcharge. Is there a secret ingredient or what? Seems to me the point of the adhesive is to provide a flexible elastic layer so just about any sticky rubbery layer would do the job. I've found that many products are just relabeled and marketed for a premium. A case in point are the neoprene/cork footers marketed by Mapleshade and found on Audiogon by other sellers. The same footers are sold by soundproofing.com and others at way (multiples!) lower prices. -Roy
Quote from: rajacat on 29 Oct 2009, 05:59 pmInstead of using Green Glue why not use ordinary adhesive silicon caulk? Who knows Green Glue might just be ordinary adhesive caulk colored green but with a price surcharge. Is there a secret ingredient or what? Seems to me the point of the adhesive is to provide a flexible elastic layer so just about any sticky rubbery layer would do the job. I've found that many products are just relabeled and marketed for a premium. A case in point are the neoprene/cork footers marketed by Mapleshade and found on Audiogon by other sellers. The same footers are sold by soundproofing.com and others at way (multiples!) lower prices. -RoySure you can do that - but it's not going to perform anywhere near like Green Glue. Bryan
$7/tube for green caulk. I wonder what it is that makes this any better than ordinary butyl rubber caulk? Have you done listening tests? Hmmm.... oh well, never mind, just another audiophile product.