This is what I ordered to insulate the truck claims no moisture absorption.
http://www.amazon.com/ESP-Low-e®-Ez...e=UTF8&qid=1446130593&sr=1-2&keywords=ez-cool
...As long as moisture had no way of getting to the base metal I figure it can't rust...
...Knowing my floors were already rusted pretty good, I wire brushed, cleaned, laid down rusty metal primer and sprayed with duplicator bed coating...
That material is a closed-cell foam with an aluminum liner bonded to it. Kind of a joke to say it blocks 97% of radiant heat and then install it somewhere that doesn't have an air space, where most of the heat will be conducted...
I
just did a post this week in the HMMWV forum about someone asking for a good sound deadening material - that's kind of the wrong way to go about it. You need to first start with where your most objectionable noise is coming from, and address that as close to the source as possible. For example, if your worst offensive noise is coming from your intake, putting Dynamat on the doors and floorboard isn't going to do much... (however, covering your intake filter can halves with Dynamat/Dynaliner and adding a GM ducted resonator to the filter can intake and routing it to the cold air intake hole in the core support on the passenger side will)
As for rust, think about the water getting to the floor from inside and outside to sheet metal. Sure, you can bond a dynamat or other pad directly to the floor with some 3M 90 contact adhesive, but if you get a hole from the outside of the sheet metal letting water into the footwell, it can create a pocket of water behind the deadening material right at the hole (where your coatings are less effective).
.
I have a belt that thrums like a guitar string when idle. It's a new belt, the right size, and properly tensioned. It stabilizes at higher RPMs...
I'm guessing (without having watched that video) that the belt goes to an alternator. Alternators are notorious for belt shock loads as each armature passes a coil - it's harder to push a rotor armature past a stator armature (towards the peak/trough of the phases output), and easier to pull away a rotor armature from a stator armature (zero-crossing for the phase).
That shock load is also bad for the belt, modern cars are addressing this with overrunning clutches and torsional dampeners on the alternator shaft, while relying on the rotor's inertia to carry it through the zero crossing unload.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EXYP1CmL9Q