Does anyone use wood for vibration control?


What kind of wood have you found to be best?
bksherm
Let’s say you’re right, for the sake of argument. Let’s say electrons vibrate and let’s say they somehow distort the audio signal. But as you say, there’s nothing you can do about it. So, why worry about something you can’t do anything about? Especially in light of the fact there are SO MANY OTHER THINGS you CAN do something about. You might as well wonder why the signal of photons can travel at lightspeed through a solid copper conductor without being distorted by ramming into something more substantial than an electron, you know, like atoms and atomic nuclei. Follow?
’Low noise transistors’ are an interesting concept. It is also interesting to note that a noise free transistor would not work. (ie , transistor 'fail', as in not work at all - no functionality)

"@michaelgreenaudio- So Mike, you and your followers are ’walking the walk’ when it comes to electron vibration within a wire?? Please tell me how you’ve all managed to ’tune’ the electrons and are preventing them from vibrating. You know, since Geoff and I are only in talk mode about it. And since your hanging out with the people who are actually doing the things being talked about here. We're discussing a theoretical supposition
here, that if true, most likely cannot be prevented. How on Earth can you 'walk' that one?"

I've tuned 3 systems today and about to work on my 4th. I think some of you are discussing theoretical supposition, but not me, I'm doing.

Michael Green

It is possible to do something without knowing why it worked. The problem is when one tries too hard to explain why it works and gets tangled in that. At the same time, good theory is always a good start, but does not guarantee real-life outcome.

There is nothing wrong with theoretical discussion, it is amusing indeed, and there is nothing wrong with having practical experience and not being able to pinpoint the explanation.

Not every good car mechanic can explain details about physics that goes into car functioning on molecular level . Does anyone think less of them because of that? It is fun understanding how it all works, though.