Results 1 to 10 of 28

Thread: Sound insulation in my 1969 911 E

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Sound insulation in my 1969 911 E

    I'm in the middle of my 1969 Porsche 911 2.0 E restoration. I try to keep the car as close to original as i can, so i don't make any updates in the car. Now i try to make the insulation on the rear parcel shelf and the rear seats. But because the insulation was almost completly missing in my car, i don't know if i did it wrong or not. Please help me with it. The only reference i had is a 10x10cm piece of felt covered with tar. I've figured it out that all the rear insulation was from this material not from this rubberised material you can see on later models.

    First i had to find the correct felt. After months i found it. It is 1cm thick and looks exaclty like the reference material.

    Name:  20170728_232944.jpg
Views: 895
Size:  36.0 KB

    After that i had to cover the rear area with this felt. It was really hard, because i didn't have any templates for this. I saw many videos and checked a lot of photos. And i measured, then cut, and measured again, and cut again... For 2 days... But i was satisfied with thge results...

    Name:  20170727_193219.jpg
Views: 1050
Size:  59.4 KB

    The problem was that this felt is not covered with tar (for water repellency maybe?). I've purchased some tar based "paint" and started to cover the felt.

    Name:  20170727_205644.jpg
Views: 998
Size:  63.2 KB

    After one layer of tar it starts to look quite good, but it needs an additional layer tomorrow to get the uniform black finish.

    Name:  20170728_201848.jpg
Views: 1127
Size:  58.2 KB

    I know it looked way much better without tar, but what can i do if that is how it looked like originally. Now the surface of the felt is quite hard, but overall you can feel that it's some soft material. So i think it works good.

    Or am i wrong? Did it look different in 1969? Please give me some advice. I have a lot of this felt material, so i can start it all over!

  2. #2
    I think you've done extremely well replicating an old style process. The only difference I can see is that if you look at an old printed parts book you can see that what was glued in were PRECUT panels with visible edges,,,,that might be the only improvement I could suggest,,,,but find parts book illustrations first to confirm what I think was done.
    Early S Registry member #90
    R Gruppe member #138
    Fort Worth Tx.

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by edmayo View Post
    I think you've done extremely well replicating an old style process. The only difference I can see is that if you look at an old printed parts book you can see that what was glued in were PRECUT panels with visible edges,,,,that might be the only improvement I could suggest,,,,but find parts book illustrations first to confirm what I think was done.
    I made the panels based on this picture. But i tried to hide the edges to make the surface smoother. But maybe i was too precise?

    Name:  911653-Daemmung_HSL_Coupe_2_2__01.jpg
Views: 889
Size:  303.3 KB

  4. #4
    Senior Member moito's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    AUSTRIA (tu felix)
    Posts
    6,714
    nice work.

    putting all this efford in a non visible area makes me wonder if you did not notice that there is the 73-door lock post welded on your car.i think if not corrected this would bother you every time when opening the passenger door
    franz

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by moito View Post
    nice work.

    putting all this efford in a non visible area makes me wonder if you did not notice that there is the 73-door lock post welded on your car.i think if not corrected this would bother you every time when opening the passenger door
    franz
    Oh my god! I can see it now. How didn't i notice it??? I'm speechless...
    It's because the chassis was restored 4 years ago, and then i were a nwebie in Porsche restoration. The only reproduction door lock post was the JP/Dansk. They suggested it from 65-89. Now i see that there are already other reproductions for 65-71 models. I will correct it before i sell the car. Danke!
    Last edited by lrogacs; 07-29-2017 at 03:53 AM.

  6. #6
    I'm at the same point in my 69 E restoration. I think your work is excellent. I've chosen a modern 3M material for my insulation, but for originality your work looks fantastic.
    1969 911 E #824

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Message Board Disclaimer and Terms of Use
This is a public forum. Messages posted here can be viewed by the public. The Early 911S Registry is not responsible for messages posted in its online forums, and any message will express the views of the author and not the Early 911S Registry. Use of online forums shall constitute the agreement of the user not to post anything of religious or political content, false and defamatory, inaccurate, abusive, vulgar, hateful, harassing, obscene, profane, sexually oriented, threatening, invasive of a person's privacy, or otherwise to violate the law and the further agreement of the user to be solely responsible for and hold the Early 911S Registry harmless in the event of any claim based on their message. Any viewer who finds a message objectionable should contact us immediately by email. The Early 911S Registry has the ability to remove objectionable messages and we will make every effort to do so, within a reasonable time frame, if we determine that removal is necessary.