Turntable Isolation


I have quad 22 l-2 speakers, NAD c-162 preamp, pair of Adcom gfa-555 amps, Cambridge Azur 640c cd player, Rega p3-24 turntable with TTSU and Herbie's mat.

Listen to all types of music, from classical to Sinatra to Miles Davis to early rock to Wilco to Arcade Fire, etc.

I've been looking at isolation solutions for my Rega (Gingko, etc) and decided to make something myself. I bought a piece of hardwood, cut it into two 19" x 16" pieces, drilled 5 dowel holes in the corners and the middle of one piece, placed Dunlop Sport (2 dot) squash balls in the dowel holes, placed the other piece of hardwood on top. Then, placed my Timbernation 2" thick maple turntable platform with spikes on top of the second piece of hardwood, then the Rega. Seems to work ok. My question is; how compressed should the balls be in order to get the best isolation for this "solution"?
gmsasso
Hi Macdad:
I'll be happy to give the vibrapods a try; they are only $6 bucks each. The feet on the P3-24 are rubber with screws and can be easily removed, I think. So, let me make sure I've got this right: Your turntable has threaded brass cones, cones sit on the floor savers, floorsavers on the Vibrapods, Vibrapods sit on the butcher block, and the block sits on siicon gell pads?

What a great set-up! Then, the turntable is leveled with the brass cones. You stated that the floorsavers sit on top on the Vibrapods, they don't fit down inside them, right?

I've got the Timbernation block already, so your set-up will only cost me $30-$40. I'll give it a try, even though the squash ball rig seems to have opened up the soundstage and surface noise is lower.

The first response I got from Schipo is one I respect, but 10 lbs. per squash ball seems like a lot. I took one of the balls and put a 10 lb. weight on it; squished it down to nearly flat. It has got to be less that 10 lbs. per ball, doesn't it?
Where is your table in relation to your speakers? I am surprised I don't hear more about people placing their table in a separate room or equipment closet. At the very least one should look for a null in standing waves. All equipment remedies will help still further but the best location should be the starting place.
I've got a 10' x 16' room, speakers at the end of the room, 2 feet from back wall, 8 feet apart (like Quad people recommend). Turntable is on a rack along the side wall, about half-way back. It is not ideal, but I don't have a way to move it to another room, which I know would be best, so I'm trying to isolate as best I can. I could put the rack between the speakers or even move it farther back on the wall away from the speakers. What do you think?
Hi Gmsasso,
Your set-up sound pretty good to me. I've had my table in a separate room in a sealed solid oak box lined with sound damping for years so I must admit I've never looked for a null in my room. With my set-up I can still faintly hear music with a stethoscope on the outside of the turntable box. I see a lot of pictures with a table only inches from the speakers. That can't be good. Blah, blah, blah, sorry I'm rambling.
I have a room analysis program "CARA" that is pretty cool in that is shows room nodes in a visual way that I find easy to "see". I would use something like that to find a null. As little as a foot or two can be significant. Good luck!
PS frequently the most significant impediment to optimal placement is significant other objections. Lucky for me we had a spare bedroom so the go ahead to get the "stereo crap" out of the living room was gladly given.
I have a Rega P2 and even the slightest tap on the cabinet it sat on produced a thump through the speakers.
I cut some foam pieces to put between the feet and plinth. One kind of foam didn't do much. What did work well was to use two or more different densities of foam. Experimenting is the key.
Everyone probably has all kinds of scrap foam lying around. It may not be as elegant as exotic custom bases, but it works and is pretty much free.