In my very limited experience, I found that hockey pucks, sometimes stacked on sponge pucks, have offered satisfactory isolation of a component. However, it would certainly depend on your environment: my components are on a concrete slab, not a suspended wood floor. I tried some spring loaded isolation footers, and while they isolated from vibrations of the underlying component stand better, the sound was far inferior.
Why spend more than $25 per piece of equipment on vibration reduction?
Do products more expensive than Vibrapods ($24 per set of four) provide superior isolation? I've been pretty happy with the pods, but I wonder whether spending somewhat more, e.g., on Iso-pucks, would bring notably superior results. Or is more a matter of visual, as opposed to audible, aesthetics?
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Vibrapods are not that effective compared To the more expensive isolation devices Such as stillpoints critical mass and other similar devices
If you hear critical mass centerstage footers it is like upgrading a major component
You gain an increassed soundstage greater clarity and imroved dynamics
DAVE and TROY audio intellect nj Critical mass dealers
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@drbond you need to use real rubber hockey pucks and not street hockey pucks. https://www.icewarehouse.com/Inglasco_Official/descpage-IHP.html |
- 40 posts total