Here's a great article by Shannon Dickson of Stereophile back in 1995. I think it was one of the first that looked at vibration effects in audio.
https://www.stereophile.com/reference/52/index.html
https://www.stereophile.com/reference/52/index.html
Active isolation; what can it do for music reproduction?
Here's a great article by Shannon Dickson of Stereophile back in 1995. I think it was one of the first that looked at vibration effects in audio. https://www.stereophile.com/reference/52/index.html |
Hats off to Shannon Dickson for his landmark article on vibration isolation and for his suggestion to attach a large auxiliary air canister to my single airspring Sub-Hertz Nimbus Platform via the air fitting on the airspring, thereby making the relatively small airspring think it was a great big SUPER airspring. |
Hats off to Shannon Dickson for his landmark article on vibration isolation and for his suggestion to attach a large auxiliary air canister to my single airspring Sub-Hertz Nimbus Platform via the air fitting on the airspring, thereby making the relatively small airspring think it was a great big SUPER airspring.off the shelf piezo electric active devices did not exist for us to buy in 1995 when Shannon Dickson wrote that article. back then it was air bladder passive for the state of the art......like my Rockport Sirius IISE turntable. my later Sirius III turntable which was introduced a year later in 1996. one relevant point regarding active from that article was that Mr. Dickson went to great lengths to say that once resonance is introduced into the system or rack you can’t get rid of it. you can only change the frequency or degree....the overall energy remains. but......now the game has changed. we are no longer limited to passive resonance attenuation. you can now actually ’STOP and START’ and compensate for that sensed resonance with active resonance attenuation devices and remove some that resonance from the equation in the specific most harmful frequencies. |