Transform Your Space with Style! 🎨
The Neoprene Sponge Foam Rubber Sheet is a versatile, closed-cell foam solution designed for soundproofing, cushioning, and DIY projects. Measuring 12 inches wide, 0.23 inches thick, and 59 inches long, this premium neoprene material is easy to cut, water-repellent, and offers excellent shock absorption and noise reduction, making it ideal for various applications from home improvement to creative crafts.
Item Thickness | 0.23 Inches |
Item Shape | Rectangular |
Item Form | Sheet |
Color | Black |
Material Type | Neoprene rubber, closed-cell foam rubber |
T**.
Just what I was hoping it would be and works great for my project
Every once in a while a product comes along that is exactly as described. This is one of those products. I received 2 roles of the 1" x 1/8" foam tape and they are perfect for my application. This foam tape is pliable and also durable. The adhesive is strong. I attached it to pine 2x4's that had been stained and varnished. The project is a diy aquarium rack which holds 10 and 20 gallon aquariums. I wanted something that I could adhere to the rack to absorb any imperfections of the surface of the wood. This foam tape appears to be just perfect for this so far. I will try to update after I have put it to the test.
D**.
Great Liner
I use this to line a drawer full of delicate camera lenses. It works great.
B**K
Good foam. Tape damage.
Overall, I like this foam. It will work for my needs. The only complaint is the 5 inch piece of cellophane tape they put on it to keep in a roll - when I carefully removed the tape, it ripped off 1/8" strip of foam underneath. Painters tape would have been a better choice.
G**N
Better than Neoprene Contact Cement and a lot faster.
It's a simple matter of measuring and cutting with scissors to get the right sized piece. Getting the waxy paper off is a little tricky because you don't want to touch the adhesive surface with your Big Greasy Fingers. Just pick-off a corner and pull it part-way leaving the rest of the strip covered. Then start your assembly by pressing the sticky part with the rest of the (covered) strip aligned in the right direction. It helps to have a solid surface and the parts that you're putting together held down with clamps or weights. Then pull the rest of the paper off the sticky surface and press down as you go. This is a coordinated action, but after you've done it a couple of times you'll have it done in a professional way.The glue is strongest if you really press it down on the parts being joined. For something like an arm for a wetsuit (which is a cylinder) you can make a support as a cylindrical form that fits INSIDE the arm so you can press the adhesive strip to good advantage rather than doing it on a flat surface and then bending the assembled arm which puts stress on the adhesive connection. Very strong adhesive- hasn't unstuck once! -If for some reason it doesn't (like there's an air bubble or a dirty greasy edge) you can still use the nasty Neoprene contact adhesive to make it all good.
V**H
Tears
Tore the foam when I removed the tape. A less aggressive tape would be better or a rubber band
C**M
It is what it is.
Worked for my intentions sealing up gaps etc
A**A
Easy to cut, nice and soft
I've got a ceiling mounted garage rack. I'm to tall and can't stand up beneath it. This is easy to form and attach to the bottom of the rack. It has saved my head from many a scar.
O**N
Adhesive not sticky enough
Works okay but you’ll need something else to hold it in place. The tape is rolled backwards so it has a natural tendency to want to unwrap from pipes. Additionally the adhesive is barely sticky enough to stick to itself and after a few days, the ends had lifted from where it was attached. Tried to restick the ends, but at that point the adhesive wasn’t sticky at all.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago