Spike feet protectors


Can someone please advise based on your experience. I have purchased a pair of PSB Imagine T3 speakers. I have a carpeted floor. I can place the speakers flat on the floor, or with spikes into carpet, or with spikes into included floor protectors. Which would you recommend for sound and carpet? Thanks
128x128easola01
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Okay, thank you. Forgot to mention it is plywood flooring with carpet over it. A mobile home
Given structure might move a bit, I would be inclined to experiment 
you might find a corner placement best for floor stiffness, failing that close to a vertical wall
have fun !
Okay, so it would be best to spike speakers into a carpet/plywood floor? I purchased Herbies spike floor protectors. They are well made and solid....but do not use? Thank you for advice, I want to of course achieve best SQ
The Herbies are a good product. But they're usually used on bare floors or hardwood to protect them from the sharp spikes. Or they're used if you plan on moving the speakers .
Damn...waste of money. I ordered them along with herbies tenderfeet for component isolation. Ah! Can sell on audiogon....not a big loss
Herbie's has a return policy. And the Tenderfeet work very well for component isolation; amp, preamp, CD, DAC. Not so much on TT's.
Thank you. So I just want to confirm. Would spiking be the best option for SQ on carpet/plywood?
I tried spiking my speakers to Herbie's gliders (carpet over plywood second floor).  I liked the SQ of spiking directly to the floor rather than the gliders.  You have to try it to find out.   
Okay, thanks. Guess that coincides with reviews I have read. My very first high end system...glad to join you veterans in this wonderful audio world!
I use Vibrapods instead of speaker spikes as they uncouple the speaker from the floor, they don’t cost much, and I think this approach makes for much better sound on wood floors than spikes. Some sort of decoupling feet are offered on a lot of pricey speakers these days which is interesting, and proves my point maybe (I've used these on different speakers with good results). Or lack of points...or renders my approach pointless.
Golden rule, couple/spike speakers to cement floor, decouple from a suspended ply/wood or sheet floor.

If you couple/spike a speaker to a suspended floor, the floor becomes a bad sound board for the bass, ruining it.

Cheers George
Ah, wow, makes sense. Suspended floor in a modular/manufactured home would resonate with speakers spiked to floor? Okay, so the herbies may be the best way then