@OP madavid0
Is your glass always half empty?
Is your glass always half empty?
Isolation stands: snakeoil?
Wow this thread has gone in quite a few directions. I have a Artisan Fidelity Lenco based table which weights 90+ lbs and is solid as a rock. My Lenco sits on two 1" granite slabs with a 3" maple block on top of the granite. I have experimented with my other devices and my current stand is great. This cost me about $500. Sure there might be an improvement with some very expensive stands but I am quite happy with my tt setup. |
https://www.silentrunningaudio.com/ The ultimate in isolation Kevin works on resonance in nuclear submarines i notice a distinct isolation of notes separated in time instead of smeared think of a pianist rolling across the keys and hearing each separate note |
@lalitk Has perhaps hit the nail on the head with the OP questions. Turntables are essentially engineering measuring devices - as such an improvement in the suspension - provided it is properly tuned and matched to the rest of the replay ought to improve this function. Microscopes serve as an excellent comparison. Have a read up on Dinsdale White papers that led to the inception of the Townshend Rock, or anything relating to EMT turntables. |
There’s a lot to be said for very massive granite slab type set ups in terms of resistance to bending forces and plain old inertia. Yet, the fact remains the entire house is vibrating according to the local seismic type forces like traffic, subways, Earth crust motion. Therefore, the granite slabs are also obviously moving right along with everything else at low seismic frequencies. For this reason using springs along with the granite slabs is suggested. Mass-on-spring. Yeah! |