A friend of mine owns a pair Totem 1s, similar to yours physically, and he went the big, heavy slab route: he had two slabs of 3" granite cut, roughly to the dimensions of his speaker. given the dimensions, this is not too heavy. Blue-tack between speakers and slab, rubber feet between slabs and desk, and voila. Nothing says it like brute force. Tiptoes under small speakers, or large speakers for that matter, tends to make the bass disappear bye-bye.
Isolating bookshelf speakers without stands?
My smaller listening room is so small that I have no flexibility in where I place my Quad 12L bookshelf speakers. They have to go on the ends of the same desk I sit at while working at the computer. On passages of low-frequency music especially, I can feel vibrations coming from the cabinet through the desk.
All the Quads have, like most bookshelf speakers, is four tiny rubber pads to separate them from the surface they sit on. My question is what reasonably inexpensive product I could use to achieve further isolation: sawed-in-half squash balls or triangular points? Or are they only for components? An isolation platform of some kind?
Any suggestions welcomed with thanks--
All the Quads have, like most bookshelf speakers, is four tiny rubber pads to separate them from the surface they sit on. My question is what reasonably inexpensive product I could use to achieve further isolation: sawed-in-half squash balls or triangular points? Or are they only for components? An isolation platform of some kind?
Any suggestions welcomed with thanks--
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- 9 posts total
- 9 posts total