I've always been of the mind for the past 30 years or so that the best way to bet better sound out of any loudspeaker was to spike them to the floor. Standmount - spike the stands. Floorstanders - spike the speakers.
I've so been under this belief that I even spiked the 200 lb Dunlavy SC-IVs when I had them. I've also gone as far as nailing my speaker stands into the floor at one point.
Then a few months ago, I called a manufacturer of a particular speaker manufactuer (a small, single 3" driver speaker) to ask them about their discontinued model which I was interested in.
In speaking with him, he told me that the speakers were intended to be decupled from the floor and that the outriggers made for their speaker line had flat, $.25 coin sized plates rather than spikes. I thought this odd since I could't figure out why a small speaker manufacturer wouldn't want to get 'more" bass out of a small 3" driver.
I then started researching this subject of couple vs decouple and, to be quite honest, it became somewhat confusing. I've read that spikes "couple" the speaker to the floor and have also read that spikes "decouple" since it reduces the surface of the speaker that makes contact with the floor.
I've seen Paul McGowen in one of his "Ask Paul" segments say that he feels that speakers need to be isolated from the floor by use of things like Iso-Pucks.
Now, my current speakers sit on Iso-Pucks, which sits on sand-filled, spiked Osiris stands. I've got both bases covered.
BTW, millercarbon. My name is David Webe. I like audio. Hence Audio D (for David) and webe (for, well, my last name Webe).
AudioDwebe
Just kidding. David Webe isn't my name. But how cool would that be, huh?