98v70dad
Well-Known Member
I just had a junkyard hood put on my 96 ranger and all of the little blobs of foam between the hood sheetmetal and skeleton below are disbonded and separated. Those little blobs are called anti-flutter foam (just learned that today) and they are there to support the thin sheet metal and also keep it from vibrating like a drum head on the highway. They have to be soft and let the sheetmetal expand or contract in temperature changes so the hood doesn't get wavy.
Anyhow, the correct stuff is easy enough to find but its pretty expensive and it requires a $100-ish cartridge gun to apply it. It is also tricky to apply. Does anyone know of a DIY solution that works and doesn't cost a fortune? I've already ruled out great stuff construction foam. It gets hard and the expansion can't really be controlled.
My best idea (I think) so far is wedging small squares of closed cell foam between the old blobs of foam and the sheet metal to fill the gap. Harbor freight shop floor mats look to be about the right thickness and they're cheap. My only concern with that is it may hold moisture between the foam and the metal if it gets wet.
I'm hoping an auto body guy can give me some advice or ideas.
Anyhow, the correct stuff is easy enough to find but its pretty expensive and it requires a $100-ish cartridge gun to apply it. It is also tricky to apply. Does anyone know of a DIY solution that works and doesn't cost a fortune? I've already ruled out great stuff construction foam. It gets hard and the expansion can't really be controlled.
My best idea (I think) so far is wedging small squares of closed cell foam between the old blobs of foam and the sheet metal to fill the gap. Harbor freight shop floor mats look to be about the right thickness and they're cheap. My only concern with that is it may hold moisture between the foam and the metal if it gets wet.
I'm hoping an auto body guy can give me some advice or ideas.