Zool,
I looked into the naugasoft a little bit. Lots of good ratings like rubs, small fire etc. but no foam backing and no perforations. So what are the pros and cons in regards to install regarding my ceiling?. As you saw my ceiling is way convoluted and I was anticipating the foam backer to help ease the transitions. Are you suggesting to directly apply the material to the ceiling as is or make mods to the indentations with foam fillers...Just wondering.
Anyone can chime in. Thanks!
Ideally, you want to use some type of semi rigid board, then a 1/4 " soft foam layer, then the NaugaSoft. Each goes on with 3m spray glue or equivalent.
fiberboard like this, or even 1/4 inch would work
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Unbrande...118-in-x-23-75-in-x-47-75-in-796762/202266042
I would ease out some of the ceiling transitions with 3/8 ply strips used as furring strips, epoxied to the ceiling, making a grid or rails so to speak. If you make some like 6" wide, you can cut holes for shallow recessed halogen lights. Get some Velcro tape and attach to the furring strips and the back of the NS boards, and they can be justbe put up. You want to quadrant off the flattest areas, and make multiple panels, and butt them snug together.
On the vertical walls, around the windows, you can get some hull liner in a complimentary color (you might like magenta
), and glue it over some 1/2" foam glued to the inner cabin walls....the combination make a factory look, and saves some coin on the NS.
Basically, you make cardboard templates, transfer to fiberboard and foam, and cut them out.
If u choose to skip the naugasoft, and do the ceiling in hull liner too, just fill in the cavities with close cell foam cut to contour and glued up, then 1" soft foam over the ceiling, then the hull liner.