Is it bad to stack your equipment


Is it really bad to stack components on top of each other. I keep getting more and more multi box components like a DAC/CD and preamps that have clean/dirty box configurations. High end racks cost so much money it would seem I could save a lot of money by stacking some equipment.

Mark
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Mark,

You can still get someone (carpenter, stoneworker, timbernation.com, somebody else) to make the shelves to your spec & assemble the rack yourself.

For the uprights, you would need only threaded rod (hardware store), bolts, washers, etc. This is the basis of the flexy rack & a number of commercial designs as well.

Best of luck,
Thanks everyone. I guess I better shelf each componet on there own. Without a woodworking shop I am not so good a working with wood. I think I better spend the money on a nice rack or hire a carpenter to build one for me.

Thanks again for all your input !!
If you're able to do easy woodwork consider building a diy Salamander clone rack. They easy to build if you're handy at all. The beauty though is that you can design it anyway you need and the shelves are always adjustable as equipment changes. Also they're very strong.

What Nrchy said above is a good reason to avoid stacking. Also the better you can get rid of the heat the more reliable your electronics will be assuming you keep them for years which many of us don't.
I built a "Salamander" clone rack for about 45. bucks from Home Depot stuff. That threaded rod does cost a few dollars!
Elizabeths problem is why I had to build my own...

Went from a 5 high to a double wide 4 high... (and still have my headphone amplifier elsewhere in the room).

(setup is different than the picture in my virtual system. TT is now on a timbernation platform & Bow is now on a gingko)
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One big issue with stacking involves components with torroidal transformers inside. Those are the round donought things. Picture this and you'll understand:

A torroidal projects through the hole in its middle. Kind of like a javeline top and bottom through the hole, for quite a good distance actually. If the torroidal is lying flat, then anything stacked above or below it has this javeline like electro-magnetic projectile shooting through it.

Shielding helps, but doesn't necessarily get rid of all of it.

Enjoy,
Bob
The answer is a resounding yes. Not just from a sonic stand point but heat is a silicon killer. There are multiple threads on heat and what it does to equipment or to leave it on or not to leave it on that you can research.

Michael
There are many issues in play, but yes, it is bad to stack. Some pieces of gear are very sensetive to electrical fields, and some pieces of gear throw out a big electrical field.

Amplifiers can interfere with CDPs and pre-amps. Racks can be made cheaply (you get what you pay for though) but better racks (read: more expensive) do a better job of stabilizing and islolating/coupling gear.

Some people go to great lengths and costs to seperate gear, and the results are worth the effort IMO.
If you invest significant dollars in components because you think it's a good thing if one wants great sound, how on earth could you, or anyone, contemplate stacking them like pancakes? Do the right thing ... buy or make your own rack to hold equipment that either cost significant dollars or that you value for their performance. Too, a good rack adds to the overall listening/aesthetic pleasure. These things really do matter, don't you think? In my case, the Sanus Euro-rack works/looks just fine! Not that expensive, actually, and easily adjustable to meet changing needs. Go for it!
Bgrazman is right. Stacking can negate the very purpose of clean/dirty boxes. Also consider that the likely hood of scratching componenets or leaving traces of rubber footings increases dramaticly. This can devalue your equipment for resale. Those racks serve a purpose.
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Well all my equipnment is stacked. Has been for years. I have gotten into tube pre amps and am now having issues. I was at my dealer about a month ago and he hooked up my system and was a/b cd players for me. he had one in the rack and one on top of the pre. after I listened for a while and decided he took the one off the pre amp and said it woudl now sound better. Couldn't beleve it! just adding air around the componment mades a big difference in sound.

For solid state I never herd a big difference but for the stuff I have now wow wouldn't of beleved it.
Mark,

I can't tell you the right answer, but here are some things to think about:

1. temperature & air flow

2. vibration/physical isolation

3. ease of keeping cables well separated

(I ended up building my own flexy type rack when I ran out of room & didn't want to pay big bux).

Happy listening,