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Car audio sound deadening is the difference between a system that reproduces music and one fighting to be heard over its own panel resonance. Factory door panels are thin sheet metal that vibrates against every bass frequency your speakers produce. Dynamat is the sound-deadening material trusted by professional car audio installers, sound pressure level (SPL) competition builders, and audiophiles who refuse to settle for the factory acoustic environment. This collection covers every kit needed for a car audio build. The PRO Speaker Kit is the starting point: enough material to treat the area behind door-mounted speakers and create a stable mounting surface. From there, the Xtreme range scales up to full-vehicle coverage. Every sheet uses proprietary butyl-based constrained-layer damping (CLD) engineered to deliver measurable noise reduction in treated panels.Â
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Car audio sound deadening is the difference between a system that reproduces music and one fighting to be heard over its own panel resonance. Factory door panels are thin sheet metal that vibrates against every bass frequency your speakers produce.Â
Dynamat is the sound-deadening material trusted by professional car audio installers, sound pressure level (SPL) competition builders, and audiophiles who refuse to settle for the factory acoustic environment.
This collection covers every kit needed for a car audio build. The PRO Speaker Kit is the starting point: enough material to treat the area behind door-mounted speakers and create a stable mounting surface. From there, the Xtreme range scales up to full-vehicle coverage.Â
Every sheet uses proprietary butyl-based constrained-layer damping (CLD) engineered to deliver measurable noise reduction in treated panels.Â
The bigger benefit for audio is panel control. When the inner door panel stops resonating, your speakers stop fighting their own enclosure. Bass tightens, midrange clears, and imaging improves without changing a component in the audio chain.Â
The PRO Speaker Kit is the typical starting point and delivers most of the audible improvement from the doors alone.Â
The best car audio sound-deadening builds use a layered approach: Xtreme on bare metal as the primary damping layer, Dynaliner closed-cell foam for thermal and airborne noise control, as well as, decoupling and DynaCore where additional heat and noise absorption is needed.Â
Xtreme has been the specification for professional installs since the 1980s and is manufactured in the USA.Â
Treat the high-impact zones first, and the cabin transforms.Â
Butyl-based mats like Xtreme work differently: constrained-layer damping converts panel vibration into thermal energy at the source. For car audio, vibration control comes first because resonating panels are what distort the audio signal. Foam can supplement, but it can't replace the damping layer underneath.Â
After doors, the trunk and rear deck are the next priority for any vehicle running a subwoofer. Floor and firewall come third, addressing engine, exhaust, and tire noise. The roof is the final tier.Â
The Tech Pack and Bulk Pack are the right scope when treating multiple zones in one project.Â
Different surfaces require different solutions. Compare our materials to find the perfect acoustic balance for your build.
View Comprehensive Guide90% Vibration · 5% Noise · 5% Heat
85% Vibration · 10% Noise · 5% Heat
50% Noise Absorption · 50% Heat Absorption
Every car is different. Tell us your vehicle and install area — we'll build your custom kit with exact quantities.