How do you feel about a wheeled dolly permanently under large floorstanding speakers?


I'm building a new room that will be home to the system I'm putting together. I looking at several floor standing speakers that aren't huge by audiophile standards, but too heavy to just grab and move easily, 60-80 lbs each. The room will be multi-use, so one option I'm considering is to move the speakers when required. They would stay in the best position for my solo listening chair, but when we have a group over and are using the game table or pool table, move them toward the wall and turn them for good sound to the overall room. It would also help me a great deal with the WAF for the room. I've been considering the wisdom of putting them on a solid MDF platform, the size of the speaker footprint, with 3 or 4 castors mounted beneath. Probably make a wood skirt to hide the wheels. Then I could roll them off the rug onto the vinyl floor and over to the wall or wherever makes the most sense. I will keep the movement relatively small so I can keep speaker cables only as long as necessary to reach the primary listening position. Do any of you have direct experience with a similar setup and its impact on sound quality?

capnr
DougS +1

I too have spent big money isolating speakers to no outstanding results


~ 5 years ago, I tried Harbor Freight dollys (which have rubber casters) just to move and position speakers and heavy components.

I have heard no good reason to remove them
I have wondered for years why no company has engineered this solution yet. You design an adjustable platform that has wheels that activate with a foot push fulcrum. You wheel into place then deactivate the wheels up and out of the way to then have the spikes support the speaker. You could also incorporate isolation materials into the base.
https://www.amazon.com/Skelang-Adjustable-Installing-Equipment-Bookshelves/dp/B07YDGZTF8/ref=asc_df_...

Replace those adjustable feet with spikes
Thanks everyone for your comments and ideas. I'm going to try a couple different approaches. For sure you gave me confidence that I can make it work for my room.