• 2 X 4 Fiberglass Ceiling Panels 40mm Thickness Acoustic System 1
  • 2 X 4 Fiberglass Ceiling Panels 40mm Thickness Acoustic System 2
  • 2 X 4 Fiberglass Ceiling Panels 40mm Thickness Acoustic System 3
2 X 4 Fiberglass Ceiling Panels 40mm Thickness Acoustic

2 X 4 Fiberglass Ceiling Panels 40mm Thickness Acoustic

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Loading Port:
Shanghai
Payment Terms:
TT OR LC
Min Order Qty:
3000 m²
Supply Capability:
10000 m²/month

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Fiberglass Ceiling

The tiles are manufactured from high density fiberglass wool.The visible face has a decorative fiberglass tissue and the back of the tile is covered with normal tissue.The four edges of the tile are sealed and have grooves. It can be jointed together without suspended system. The tiles will cover the suspension system after installation. They are are suitable for loe flap ceiling space and concrete-made, wooded-made or gymsum ceiling.

 

Installation method:

Use screw to fix the smooth roof. The tiles can be connected after making grooves on each two jointed edges.

Tiles are easy to trim and install

Both inches and metric grids are available

 

Main Characteristic:

Non-combustible

No sagging,wrapping or delaminating

Green building material

Excellent sound absorption

 

Application:

Halls,classrooms,offices,shopping centers.etc.

Acoustic fiberglass ceiling contains a better perfomance in tension strong, light weight, so it is easy to trim and install for interior decoration, with T-grids for suspension system or glue, nail or good material could come with fiberglass ceiling baord. Thus an excellent artical work need a high quality acoustic ceiling board, also high quality.

Energysaving is a trend for our 21' era, new product like fiberglass ceiling tile could in place of traditional products one day. Which depends on functional characters: little deflection of geometry dimention, no radiocative property, specific activity of 226Ra: Ira ≤1.0 and specific activity of 226 Ra 232 Th, 40 K: Ir ≤ 1.3. Both products and packages can be recycled.

 

Q: we have numerous recessed light fixtures in our ceiling. Is fiberglass insulation flammable?
Fiberglass insulation will not burn. If it is the blown in loose fill kind, then there should not be any paper or anything attached to it to make it flammable. You should have what is called a light dam around it to keep insulation from covering the top of the light. It is actually quite common for insulation to be in contact with the sides of the light but it should not cover the top. Of course, if you have what is called and I.C. rated recessed light, then it has it's own protection built in. These are usually pretty rare and not used by home builders generally. We always play it safe and put light dams around every recessed light we find. This light dam is a class a fire rated piece of radiant barrier taped together to form a tube that is taller the the insulation around it so that insulation can not easily be pushed over the top or blown into the top of the tube if installing new insulation.
Q: Our basement family room has an insulated ceiling but the bedrooms do not. One bedroom is below a bathroom and it gets very loud because of a water waste pipe. We have a storage room that has open access to the ceiling space. It would be about 20ft that we would have to push insulation into. This seems like it would be very hard with traditional roll insulation. It would be very easy to put some lengths of soundboard or xps or something in, but I don't know if it would achieve the desired effect. Thanks in advance.
XPS - expanded polystyrene - would be a poor choice for sound insulation. Better than nothing, but not a great result for the money compared to some other choices. Fiberglass insulation does a surprisingly good job of reducing sound transmission. Add a ceiling to the joists above: suspended noise attenuation board - ask around at musical instrument stores for suggestions where to get that - can help a lot but it's pricier than other ceiling choices, so limit its use to where it's needed most: right around that pipe. If you're really sick of the noise, go nuts: Frame for a box of acoustic ceiling to go right around that entire pipe. Acoustic ceiling, also called drop ceiling tiles, again isn't everything it could be but it has the advantages of being cheap and easy to install. Make a trough that goes up against the floor above and box in that pipe. You might lose some tiles in the event of a future leak, but no biggie: the tiles are cheap. Now insulate around the box and under the floor above, same as you did elsewhere in the basement. Now install a dropped ceiling in the entire space. The noise from the pipe will probably still be audible, but it should be nothing like what it was.
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Q: I read that fiberglass insulation that has a backing sheet should have the backing sheet toward the heated space. The insulation in the basement ceiling has the backing sheet toward the inside of the basement not the bottom of the floor above. Does this trap moisture and cause a lot of harm or does it just make the insulation less effective? Do I need to take it all down and start with new insulation? Should I just add a new layer over the top what is there?
If you are worrried about trapping moisture. Just cut a bunch slits in the paper with a razor blade, or poke a bunch holes to open it up. I assume you will be coveringing it anyway.
Q: I have hanged the drywalls on both the ceiling and walls. My questions is how should I tape the joints between the ceiling and walls? Should I use a regular paper tape, a fiberglass mesh or a paper corner bead (inside corner)?
It is best to use the fiberglass tape in that it allows the mud to penetrate to the sheetroock for a better hold. It is also good when sanding to know if u need to add more mud or sanded to deep.
Q: My insulation was installed paper towards the roof.
Yes it matters! Paper side should go down (toward the living space) because the paper side has a vapor barrier that will trap any moisture. If you install it backwards, you'll trap moisture in your insulation and make it less efficient. If you are installing additional insulation over existing, you can install the paper side up and then cut the paper side to provide an escape for and vapor.
Q: My studio apartment doesn't have an attic. A lot of the installation videos and articles I read online are about installing foil insulation a couple inches below the roof and above the room's ceiling. Does it matter if I install it under the ceiling (that is, the foil barrier is visible to me when inside the apartment)?Aesthetics isn't an issue. I don't mind seeing the foil. I just want to know if I can still achieve the same results whether or not I install above the ceiling. Thanks!
The foil would only radiate visible light back toward you, and fiberglass insulation ( or rigid polyisocyanurate panels covered with drywall) would create a barrier to keep the heat in your room. If just foil worked, you would assume no one would bother with installing 10 thick fiberglass to achieve an R-38 rating and spend thousands of dollars if a couple hundred of foil would do it.
Q: i am living in a ground storey house and there's no construction on top of my house. therefore it's very hot in summer and winter is normal.please help me to elaborate any procedure or material for cooling my top (ceiling) . i would be very grateful. thanks and regards.
If you have a one story house, you must have an attic. Fiberglass insulation is the best way to help with the heat transfer from the roof to the inside of the house thru the attic. R-30 is the best but R-19 fiberglass batts will work too, depending on your budget and the space above the ceiling in the attic.R-30 insulation is 9 or 10 inches thick and is 15' OR 23 ' wide, R- 19 is 6 thick. Lay the batts of insulation above the wood framing in the attic , leave no spaces between the batts, and do not compress the batts, they need to be full thickness to work the best they can. If no attic space is there, then you need Styrofoam insulation under the roofing, on top of the roof deck, which is a whole different matter.
Q: Glass fiber plant to waste silk down in our here, this is harmful to our living environment?
In the past, they are sometimes used to do ceiling cotton, and now have been eliminated. It is because they cause damage to the human respiratory system, so the state put this thing included in the ban on the list.

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