
Roughly there's 4 main types of popular sealants, ACETIC, ACRYLIC, NEUTRAL and BUTYL (hope I haven't missed any).
I've heard that ACETIC silicone is not ok (hardens too much right?).
However after searching and contacting various customer supports I found out that some say that NEUTRAL curing (known as neutral curing or pure silicone) shrinks less, hardens less and stays more elastic/flexible than ACRYLIC caulk over the years. Probably that is also due to the fact that ACRYLIC is more plastic and less elastic than the NEUTRAL one.
A popular silicone brand here in Italy suggests that the NEUTRAL one should be more flexible than the ACRYLIC. And regarding BUTYL it suggests that it's quite flexible but for joints that move more than 5% again NEUTRAL is better.
The GE Silicone II (NEUTRAL) site, the one that's much appreciated by Rod, states as follows:
"Silicone (GE Silicone II) stretches and compresses with joint movement as a house moves and settles. It remains permanently flexible and does not harden over time, which causes acrylic caulk to break—again, leaving cracks and gaps for air and water to pass."
However Auralex Stopgap (quite expensive I must say) and OSI SC-175 are both water based (ACRYLIC?) and both seem to be considered very good as acoustic sealants.
If we could understand which of the 4 types is best for acoustic caulking maybe I might be able to save some bucks and choose not by the brand's name but simply by it's specs...
Thanks for your help!
Pat