Townshend Audio speaker podiums...three ways to install


Looking for some input from those who might have experience with this product or those well versed in speaker isolation principles in general.

Yesterday I received the podiums for installation under my Avantgarde Duos (with sub 225s). I bought these direct from Jim Smith about 20 years ago so they are not the current style sub cabinetry but the style they sold for many years where the sub, then tweeter horn and then the midrange horn are all mounted/suspended to/from three outboard vertical metal support rods, two located on the outer edge of the speaker and one on the inside edge. I initially had these speakers supported on four large carpet piercing spikes that were threaded into the bottom of the sub cabinet in factory fitted inserts, thus supporting  the entire assembly and the metal frames off the floor. To this day, this is the best bass articulation I have heard from the speakers and would have never made a change except there was an unsolvable problem with floor shake (raised floor...carpet over ply decking over joists supported on concrete block piers). I finally talked myself into a change after Jim Smith said that decoupling was the way to go and told Jim to please get me some Grand Prix Audio Apex footers but they couldn’t deliver on the thread size AG specified. So I made a slight change in direction and ended up where I am today with Stillpoints Ultra 5s on the optional Ultra bases (wide decouplers) and they have performed beautifully at curbing the floor shake but the price being paid is a slight loss in bass articulation. With the Stillpoints, they are screwed into the bottoms of the metal support rods so now the the speaker’s weight is held up by three Stillpoints via the rods with the sub supported an inch above the floor vs. four brass spikes directly into the bottom of the sub.

Enter the podiums. It seems I have three different ways to deploy them. First, I can remove all isolation hardware from the bottoms and simply place the sub cabinet bareback, if you will, (Townshend’s word) on the podium itself. Second, I can leave the Stillpoints in place and lift the speaker so fitted onto the podium. Third, I can remove the Stillpoints, reinstall the brass spikes and lift this assembly onto the podiums with the spikes tips sitting in brass cups. The last two solutions will result in an upward repositioning of the driver centers by approx. two inches but can be accounted for.

So bareback, the decoupling approach Stillpoints or the coupling approach spikes...any insights would be appreciated.

BTW, John @ Stillpoints has voiced his opinion and I likely will go with it but I would rather not reveal it now so as not to have any influence on the thoughts of others.

acresverde

Showing 2 responses by millercarbon

Uh, that’s what I thought he would say. So I left out the brass cups detail. He did not say put speakers directly on the Podiums, which is what will sound best. I remain standing, feeling not even the slightest tickle.

Incidentally it is not that hard, I got my 150lb Moabs on mine all by myself. First put the Podiums exactly where you want them. Then with the speakers standing close by tilt away from the Podium until balanced on one side. From there "walk" the speakers up onto the Podiums. I had my wife standing by in case I lost my balance but it is really the extra set of eyes to avoid running into anything. No heavy lifting required.

It will come as no surprise John at Stillpoints will say use the Stillpoints on the Podium. Or else, knock me over with a feather. It could happen. Kudos to John if otherwise.

Your best results will be speakers directly on Podiums. This will however leave you with the problem of how to get the speakers up onto the Podiums without breaking hour back or scratching the bottoms. Also the Podiums have an incredibly tough coating, but probably not tough enough to withstand pointy spikes on heavy speakers. 

That is why I use BDR between the Podiums and my Moabs. Pretty sure the sound will be even better with the Moabs directly on the Podiums. But there are times we balance time and effort with results and this for me is one of those times. If you want what I think is the very best sound, bareback. Use a couple young guys to lift the speakers, or use cardboard or something similar to avoid scratches.

Whichever way you go be prepared for massive improvement.