What I’m confused about is which kind of insulation to use, and what order to lay the layers in. Any suggestions for what would be the best insulation/plywood, or is my thinking completely wrong on this? Also, would drilling triangular blocks on the foundation at the wheels help absorb impact at all?
Any sort of foam, even styrofoam, will help with thru air sound, but it sounds like your problem is with motor vibration etc. being transmitted through the device and into the floor. I’ve built a number of devices with ~1/4 horse high speed motors, and found closed cell foam of the type used by backpackers as sleeping pads
-Oh good, I hit ‘reply’ instead of ‘preview.’ :smack:
Any sort of foam, even styrofoam, will help with thru air sound, but it sounds like your problem is with motor vibration etc. being transmitted through the device and into the floor. I’ve built a number of devices with ~1/4 horse high speed motors, and found closed cell foam of the type used by backpackers as sleeping pads to be effective at deadening transmitted vibrations. Your treadmill likely puts out more low frequencies than my app, but the foam does work for stuff down below 60 cycles.
I’d go with a layer of foam, a chunk of plywood, and another foam layer on top. With 3/4 inch plywood, that’d make the whole pad less than two inches thick.
That’s exactly the advice I was looking for Squink. And, yes, his main complaint is vibrations though he complains about the sound too, which is why I mixed shock absorption with soundproofing in my OP.
Stupid question, though… wouldn’t the weight of the treadmill squish the closed-cell foam to virtually nothing?
That’s why I go with closed cell. It will compress some, but the weight’ll be distributed pretty evenly under the plywood. The piece on top will get dents where the treadmill sets down, but won’t squish to nothing unless your treadmill’s on pointy feet. -If it’s got feet of any kind, you might want to consider modifying them to increase rheir surface area