Technics SP-10 Tonearm Pod instead of Plinth/Base


Trawling through the Audiogon forums for information on a suitable Plinth for a Technics SP-10, I came across a post by Raul.
Instead of putting the SP-10 in a plinth, he just put the TT on three feet and then had constructed a separate base that only housed the tonearm. (I haven't seen a pic of this BTW)
Following on from Raul's 'Thinking outside the square' approach, I thought I might be able to buy, or have made, a stand-alone 'pod' or rectangular tonearm plinth that could sit along side the SP-10. Has anyone seen something like this that I could buy 'off-the-shelf'?
The advantage of this is that the tonearm is decoupled from the TT and therefore distanced from any vibrations generated by the TT.
A down side is getting the right geometry for the tonearm in relation to the distance from the spindle; and then keeping the pod in the right spot.
If this is all too hard, I might still go with a plinth. I notice an E-Bay seller in Taiwan is offering a Teak plinth cut for the SP-10. Anyone bought one of those?
All comments welcomed!
dsa

Showing 1 response by totem395

I'm in the middle of a new plinth for my
Victor TT101 DD and thought Id mention my primary material is Bamboo ply.
Very solid, heavy, and stable with inner and outer stacked layers at 90 deg to each other.
It can be hard on cutters to machine and wears carbide faster than other materials I have used. There may be more than one variety on the market as this version was sourced from a cabinet shop where they use a CNC vacuum setup using double compression style cutters that leave a cut line very smooth.