Jeff is right, a turntable with suspension is not designed to reject the type of problems you get from bouncy floors. Wall mount is the way to go.
Turrntable With or Without Suspension?
Hello yous guys.
So I'm looking to spend $500ish for a turntable with cartridge.
The main problem is that the turntable is going to live in a place where it will have to bear the brunt of my family stomping and clomping around it's vicinity.
Should I go for a turntable with built-in suspension or should I just rig something up or purchase some special mats to absorb the vibrations?
Let me knows what yous think.
J
So I'm looking to spend $500ish for a turntable with cartridge.
The main problem is that the turntable is going to live in a place where it will have to bear the brunt of my family stomping and clomping around it's vicinity.
Should I go for a turntable with built-in suspension or should I just rig something up or purchase some special mats to absorb the vibrations?
Let me knows what yous think.
J
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- 18 posts total
Wall mounts also give you a built-in height advantage over the young'ns. My wall shelf (see photo below) uses two of the heavy duty brackets you can get from most hardware stores. The brackets need to have that triangular brace. The invariably come in white, but you could easily Krylon to taste. Mine happily bears quite a lot of weight. http://www.stat.ucla.edu/~erickson/projects/cuemaster/cuemaster.jpg |
- 18 posts total