Sound Advice
Everlast Fitness Flooring comes in a variety of shapes, sizes, and thickness, and, in many cases, eliminates the need for an additional acoustical underlayment.
Today's fitness facilities are different than they were in the past. From light weight construction to multi-story gyms and members flinging bulkier weights on the floor, today's gyms must take sound transmission into consideration.
When it comes to weight rooms and building acoustics, foam isn't desirable, because it is not durable and is too soft. On the other hand, plastic is too rigid. Rubber has the perfect combination of resilience and internal damping, drastically reducing the propagation of any heavy impacts and vibrations.
Today's fitness facilities are different than they were in the past. From light weight construction to multi-story gyms and members flinging bulkier weights on the floor, today's gyms must take sound transmission into consideration.
When it comes to weight rooms and building acoustics, foam isn't desirable, because it is not durable and is too soft. On the other hand, plastic is too rigid. Rubber has the perfect combination of resilience and internal damping, drastically reducing the propagation of any heavy impacts and vibrations.
- Air space provides superior vibration isolation.
- One-inch thick footed tiles surpass noise and shock absorption qualities of any other fitness floor.
- Can withstand the constant dropping of weights and pounding of equipment while minimizing noise.
- Five millimeter (mm) or 12 mm rubber backing reduces spread of heavy impacts and vibrations.
- 5 mm or 12 mm rubber backing.
- Turf wear layer and rubber backing work together to create an acoustically ideal product: absorptive on top, vibration isolating on bottom.