you laugh but when I visited Solid State Logic’s recording studio just north of Oxford in the early 80s the reference monitors were suspended from the ceiling I too have seen speakers suspended from the ceiling with chains in a medieval dungeon styie arrangement. Sounded excellent. |
bachemar- Imagine if you (speaker) were trying on different types of mattresses (footers) and were wriggling in place (speaker vibration) and how the mattress felt. Now imagine different types of mattresses and what exactly would happen to your wriggling efforts
- Cheap spring mattress, where you can feel the springs - The springs would absorb some of your wriggling, but it would still feel uncomfortable, because you can feel the "springiness" of the springs. This springiness is really the springs bouncing back from your wriggling but with a slight time delay.
- You now add a pillowtop to the spring mattress (the Damping that was mentioned in an earlier post) - Ah much more comfortable, the pillowtop absorbs some of the low amplitude wriggling, and also absorbs some of the spring feedback, so it feels less bouncy
- An old school (non memory) foam mattress - slightly better, but still suffers from the springiness, although to a lesser extent
- You now try on a memory foam mattress (sorbothane, Herbie's discs etc.). There's no more force feedback from the mattress, and the memory foam, helps absorb and dampen your wriggling
- Sleep on the floor or a block of wood/stone/marble etc. that is lying on the floor - This would be fairly uncomfortable, the floor does nothing to absorb the wriggling, but doesn't impede it either. As you wriggle, you create multiple contact points between body and floor, which could create its own rattling sound.
- Now imagine if your skin was rigid, and had built spikes attached to your back, sleeping and wriggling on a concrete/stone floor - Similar to above, but the spikes might reduce the contact points making it slightly harder to wriggle and much more reduced rattling noise
- Now imagine sleeping with built in spikes, but these spikes have dug into the wooden floor - I imagine, the bonding of the spike with floor would create a damping effect making it harder for you to wriggle
bachemar, Imagine you are an audiophile. No, wait, too hard. Nevermind. |
MIllercarbon, Is your listening room floor concrete slab on grade or wood frame? I would think decoupling would be more effective on a lower mass / lower stiffness floor. Curious if your significant improvement with Townsend podiums is applicable to slab on grade. |
sokogear - assuming the steel disc is rigid and doesn't deflect, the stress will be spread uniformly over the area of the disc. That is how structures work, like a column load being supported by a square footing, and is why they use discs in the first place - to spread the load out so the spike doesn't poke or dent the floor. If the disc is not exactly rigid (although I believe they are), then the load will be somewhat higher under the concentrated point. You are correct though that it is a lot of load over a small area. If I were to support my 180-pound speaker/stand assembly on four 18mm diameter discs, the resulting pressure under the discs would be over 100 psi or over 16K psf, so maybe that couples the speaker....I don't know. |
Wow,just reading this post will wear you out,let alone trying half of these things.Save yourself a lot of time,energy,and hassle,and just go buy 8 Stillpoint Ultra 5’s. They are reasonably priced,easy to install,solves 99 percent of anyone’s problems,sound beautiful,and look beautiful. I’ve had them under a set of Focal Scala Utopia V2 lll’s for over five years.The house is on a cement slab and I couldn’t be happier.From the minute they were installed,the music became more detailed and better in every aspect.I am amazed at the lengths people go to trying to address such an easy fix. John |