Plumber101010
Well-Known Member
Lifetime Member
Well, after messing with this for a couple of weeks and trying various methods and materials, with an emphasis on cheap and simple, i'm ready to post my results, even though it's not quite 100% perfected yet.
No sense in boring everybody with what I tried and didn't work so I'll concentrate on what did.
I took a piece of 3/4 inch plywood, scrolled it out to the same specs as the seat, plopped it down and mounted the seat back on top of it.
Then I took some 2 inch memory foam and cut a strip and mounted it between the back of the seat and the frame to plug that small gap.
I have a rear fabric panel so I also took some memory foam and wedged it between the back of the seat and the panel.
This produced about a 50% overall reduction in noise. The beauty of it is not so much the noise reduction itself, but it seemed to put a ceiling on the ups and downs, the high notes to say.
In other words, it's not just that it's much quieter now, but the noise is much "smoother" and consistent instead of hearing specific up-and-down and all around tones.
It's almost as if it's been encapsulated and so now it's just one sound and not many sounds. A nice quiet hum.
I do not have it permanently mounted and that's why I said its not quite perfected yet.
It's easily rideable and I took her (y'all do realize that the 1000 is a female) on her first test drive tonight and simply sitting in the seat on top of the plywood with sufficient because of the two posts that come up and hold it in place.
I was actually shocked that it felt so solid without doing any additional mounting. Just laying the plywood on the frame and putting the seat on the plywood was shockingly very stable! The two post were sufficient from stopping the bottom of the seat from sliding forward.
I will leave it like this for a while but the next step obviously is to actually secure the plywood with a couple of screws to the frame and or attach the plywood to the seat bottom so that it's all one piece.
It was getting late and I was tired but I need to look to see about extending the post up three quarters of an inch and doing something to raise the metal center latch also.
In my head as I envision it, I just want it to do exactly what it was designed to do now, except having a three quarter-inch thick piece of plywood underneath the bench seat.
All in all, I think it's a project worth doing as the noise level has been reduced more than enough to make it a worthy task.
Taking the 50% out of the equation, let's just say that the noise level has been reduced sufficiently enough to make this project worth everyone's time.
No sense in boring everybody with what I tried and didn't work so I'll concentrate on what did.
I took a piece of 3/4 inch plywood, scrolled it out to the same specs as the seat, plopped it down and mounted the seat back on top of it.
Then I took some 2 inch memory foam and cut a strip and mounted it between the back of the seat and the frame to plug that small gap.
I have a rear fabric panel so I also took some memory foam and wedged it between the back of the seat and the panel.
This produced about a 50% overall reduction in noise. The beauty of it is not so much the noise reduction itself, but it seemed to put a ceiling on the ups and downs, the high notes to say.
In other words, it's not just that it's much quieter now, but the noise is much "smoother" and consistent instead of hearing specific up-and-down and all around tones.
It's almost as if it's been encapsulated and so now it's just one sound and not many sounds. A nice quiet hum.
I do not have it permanently mounted and that's why I said its not quite perfected yet.
It's easily rideable and I took her (y'all do realize that the 1000 is a female) on her first test drive tonight and simply sitting in the seat on top of the plywood with sufficient because of the two posts that come up and hold it in place.
I was actually shocked that it felt so solid without doing any additional mounting. Just laying the plywood on the frame and putting the seat on the plywood was shockingly very stable! The two post were sufficient from stopping the bottom of the seat from sliding forward.
I will leave it like this for a while but the next step obviously is to actually secure the plywood with a couple of screws to the frame and or attach the plywood to the seat bottom so that it's all one piece.
It was getting late and I was tired but I need to look to see about extending the post up three quarters of an inch and doing something to raise the metal center latch also.
In my head as I envision it, I just want it to do exactly what it was designed to do now, except having a three quarter-inch thick piece of plywood underneath the bench seat.
All in all, I think it's a project worth doing as the noise level has been reduced more than enough to make it a worthy task.
Taking the 50% out of the equation, let's just say that the noise level has been reduced sufficiently enough to make this project worth everyone's time.