Townshend Springs under Speakers


I was very interested, especially with all the talk.   I brought the subject up on the Vandersteen forum site, and Richard Vandersteen himself weighed in.   As with everything, nothing is perfect in all circumstances.  If the floor is wobbly, springs can work, if the speaker is on solid ground, 3 spikes is preferred.
128x128stringreen
tweak……and so few are time aligned and phase correct…so springs “ work “ for them. The narrow focus of tge tgread should have applied… alas..

Mike - i would also trade the high end gear and sonics to relive my young adulthood… 
tomic601..

Springs and floppy things allow the cabinet to retain information and resonance far to long. The cabinet is a passive radiator that transmits sound into the air along with the intended signal. The cabinet motion also becomes a part of the voice coil motion. The voice coil drives the cone but also has to overcome the force of the cabinet in motion even more so when suspended on springs or floppy thing mounted.  More to follow.  Tom
If it was cabinet resonance, then a board green glued to the bottom of the case might help.
I would like to see some evidence that they reduce HD.
Putting the speak on a plate of steel or rock would seem to make more sense to me. 
Well I have owned the Star Sound Sistrum and Townshend Pod products and have heard first hand the differences each approach has to the resulting sound. Speakers on a hard wood floor with crawl space under the house. The Star Sound Sistrum platforms were great. They tended to spotlight the highs and upper mids while speeding up and tightening the bass. Improved focus and inner detail. Less blurring of massed instruments.

The Townshend Pod products removed noise and made the music sound much more at ease and enjoyable. More natural if you will. They made the music more fun to listen to in my experience. That is how I experienced both methods of “isolation”. Just my experience and I realize this topic is more complex than my singular experience.