try it with the original feet first. the heavy platter can take a lot
Isolating Thorens TD160 turntable?
I have a Thorens TD160 which has a spring-suspended sub chassis which makes it very responsive to vibrations. I currently have it in a very stable location in the listening room which isolates it very well from footfalls and other jarring activity. But, it is in a very inconvenient location making it difficult to gain access, and consequently, I'm discouraged from using it regularly.
I would like to relocate it to the top of the wooden equipment cabinet that holds my electronics, and in fact, there is a space for it. However, whenever I've put it on top of the cabinet in the past - experimenting with cones, Vibrapods, V-pads (like Mapleshade "isoblocks") or various combinations - the TT remains highly sensitive to room vibrations and the arm/cartridge bounce like a rubber ball even as I tiptoe away from the cabinet. A wall-mounted TT bracket is out of the question in that location.
In the past I've had a solid plinth non-suspended TT on the top of my cabinet and never had a problem.
Is there any way to isolate a suspended TT in my cabinet-top location to create a relatively vibratin-free set-up?
I would like to relocate it to the top of the wooden equipment cabinet that holds my electronics, and in fact, there is a space for it. However, whenever I've put it on top of the cabinet in the past - experimenting with cones, Vibrapods, V-pads (like Mapleshade "isoblocks") or various combinations - the TT remains highly sensitive to room vibrations and the arm/cartridge bounce like a rubber ball even as I tiptoe away from the cabinet. A wall-mounted TT bracket is out of the question in that location.
In the past I've had a solid plinth non-suspended TT on the top of my cabinet and never had a problem.
Is there any way to isolate a suspended TT in my cabinet-top location to create a relatively vibratin-free set-up?
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