Speaker stand spikes ~2” long?


I’ve got a pair of Dynaudio Stand 20’s in black and I’m wanting taller spikes. 
However I need a set that has a nice top nut that goes down through the stand and then into the carpet.
  
Where are the stands for a visual of what I want.

https://www.worldwidestereo.com/products/dynaudio-stand-20-speaker-stands-for-bookshelf-speakers-pai...
todd1010

Showing 5 responses by theaudiotweak

Audiopoints by Starsound have 2 inch Audiopoints you may need a metric thread..take 1 you have to a hardware store and ck the thread count and pitch. Tom
Any coupling point should be of 1 continious  run of the same material. To be made of more than one material shifts the tone, weight and acoustic transfer speed of the device. Almost as bad is the of use an adjustment nut which decouples the primary large conductive flange from either the speaker or the component. You are also altering the sound by introducing a disruptive shape made up of several right angles the worst sounding angle in existence a threaded Nut..A simple cone shape of just one primary angle allows energy to go down but will also some allow some energy to be reflected from the floor back into that singular geometry introducing interfering energy into the signal path. Tom
For clearance here...I work with Starsound/Audiopoints..but I also have my own company Tone Acoustics. I started years ago to prove a point that this techology will work on most anything that touches the floor..cello and bass and bass clarinet for sure..anyway we use brass the metal of music. I am a fan of what we do. Tom
The super hard materials are to bright..they tend to make the soundstage crawl up the wall in front of the listener. All materials vibrate and the harder materials have a higher velocity and make the air vibrate faster which makes for more listening fatigue. A simple cone geometry allows for reflected energy to re enter into the system.Tom
Dentdog we have designed and added this new device to our solution portfolio..The APCD4 is a coupling floor disc or a point topper that wont tip over.
http://starsoundtechnologies.com/productsDetail.php?APCD4-Invert-38
On the floor you maybe able to slide or angle the speaker into position. Have a friend help in balancing the speaker when moved. These devices help with fine tuning geometry and increase sonic performance. This is an incredible new part. Tom