Why Does A Concrete Floor/Spiked Metal Rack...


suck all the warmth and life out of my system?

I have been thoroughly dissatisfied with my hi-fi system for the good part of a year now and I have been unable to until recently to put my finger on the problem. In a nutshell, almost every CD I would play would sound bright and harsh and bass light. The top end and upper midrange would completely overwhelm the bottom end. I have experimented with all sorts of tweaks and in particular various isolation devices, and although I was able to achieve minor changes to the tone the overall top end brightness and lack of bass was still evident.

I was enjoying (as best as I could given the problem!) a listening session and wracking my brain (for the ten millionth time) for ideas on how to make my system work better, when it suddenly dawned on me that I had these small plastic/hard rubber? cups that might be ideal to place under the rack spikes as a last ditch attempt to solve the brightness issue. With the music still playing I carefully tilted the rack enough to slip the cups under each spike on the four corners of the rack, thus de-coupling the rack from the concrete floor. They were a perfect fit and the effect was both immediate and DRAMATIC. The system was for the first time tonally balanced, the bass response increased, the sound stage widened, the noise floor dropped, there was greater depth, increased clarity, and most importantly the brightness and harshness had completely disappeared!

I was firmly of the belief that audio racks should be coupled to the floor for stability and assist with the reduction of floor vibration eminating from the floor. My rack is a rigid design composed of tubular steel and every cavity is filled with sand in order to reduce any possible ringing. The rack is supported by four large adjustable screw in spikes which penetrate the carpet and couple the rack to the concrete floor beneath. The components are supported on MDF shelving. What I discovered this weekend is that this rack/floor interface was completely sucking the life out of the system. Upper midrange and top end frequencies were being accentuated at the expense of the lower mid range and bottom end, thus producing the fatiguing brightness and harshness.

Can anybody explain to me in laymans terms why this occurs?
unhalfbricking
Changing one thing will not eliminate the problem.Changing one thing will only mask and fail to eliminate the inherent problem. The root cause of the problem still exists. Dampening is another storage medium. Tom
NZ has earthquakes that are of low intensity but more frequent than anywhere else on earth. How near to Rotorua (SP?) are you?
Other end of the country. Rotorua is in the central North Island, I live towards the bottom of the South Island. As for NZ having earthquakes of low intensity, there was a 7.4 quake in the lower South Island a couple of weeks back. Luckily the epicentre was well away from human settlement, but it scared the bejesus out of a lot of people, me included!
O.K. I emptied the sand from my rack as Twl suggested, removed the cups from beneath the spikes and now my system sounds thin, bass light and has a metallic ring to the sound. I should have followed my instincts and left well alone!
Unhalfbricking...As you may have guessed, I spent some time in NZ as a child, and still have the right to reactivate NZ citizenship. You have a great country.

I think that the worst NZ quake some years ago was near you in Dunedin. Seismic activity at a very low level is frequent which is fortunate because it relieves stresses and minimizes occurrence of big damaging quakes. Much earthquake research is done in NZ, which surprises most people because well publicized big ones are so rare.

If you have any of that super fine pumice sand near you, try that as a damping medium in hollow tubular legs of you stand.