I imagine TT designers trash many prototype materials before arriving at what they choose for their product. It should be a requirement imo, especially for some of the higher priced tables to understand the room/gear used to arrived at a turntable design.
This should be published information.
Regarding building turntables and materials used.
Here is a list of materials along with a number beside them. The number indicates the materials ability to pass thru sound (a high number) or hinder sound (a lower number).
The higher the number allows a better pass thru of sound. the lower number deadens, inhibits, absorbs.
Material Z0 [MRayls]
aluminium.........17
brass.............37
copper............42
cast iron.........37
lead..............25
magnesium.........10
steel.............45
tin...............24
tungsten..........101
araldite..........4-13
brick.............15
concrete..........7-10
glass.............10-15
granite...........27
marble............10
slate.............12
all plastics......1-4
all wood..........1-4
except cork.......0.1
carbon fibre......30
This data is informational only and was taken from this site.
http://qualia.webs.com/plinthbuilding.htm"Another property of materials is the acoustic impedance, that is, how easily sound passes from one material to another. Nearly all the data available is concerned with supersonic frequencies of sound, typically 5 MHz, so not really useful in the audio range. However, it does suggest that getting sound from one material to another seems to be dependent on their respective acoustic impedances, easily calculated as:
Z0 = p x c where Z0 is the acoustic impedance, p is rho, for density, c is the speed of sound through the material [longitudinal wave velocity]
Some acoustic impedances of common materials: Z0 in N•s/m³ /106"
So to transfer sound from one material to another effectively may mean using materials with similar acoustic impedances, or, to hinder transfer, (as in isolation), choosing materials with very different acoustic impedances.
What about rounded edges for the plinth/armpod materials themselves over straight edge; to better deal with resonances? This is done with speakers.