I also thought of Salamander as being a great product. It may be because it’s double wide, not sure. I’ve ordered a maple platform and vibrant pods and cones. If those don’t fix it, I’ll go back to the homemade stand. I guess it turns out that my own engineering was pretty good!
Audio Furniture has its own sound!
I've been using a stand that I made about 12 years ago. It's a flexi-type, with large rods, and I cut chrome curtain rods to cover the threaded rods. For shelves, I glued two pieces of MDF together, routed the edges, and painted with stone paint. Looks great, and it's really heavy and sturdy. But, I got a little tired of the look. I do think there is sound to furniture if it vibrates, but solid is solid, right?
So, I found a used Salamander Chameleon Sonoma 326. It matches the other furniture perfectly, looks great in the room, and has a perfect amount of storage. And, room on top for the turntable, as well as the Primaluna HP. Makes it look like simple and elegant system. The Salamander is very heavy, and made from solid wood.
But, when I hooked it up, that damn Salamander rings like a bell, and that energy totally transfers to the tonearm. I could not believe how horrible the system now sounded! Clearly the furniture was the problem. It was immediate, and completely ruined the sound. I think part of the issue is that it has a metal frame beneath the wood, and the sides seem to cause the metal frame to vibrate and ring.
Now, I'm on an adventure to see if I can fix it. My plan is 2 inch thick maple platform with vibrapods under the platform. A platform for the amp, a separate one for the TT, and vibrapods under the phono preamp. I have used an old tabletop from Ikea (it's honeycomb inside, and good dampener) with rubber feet, and it's helped a lot. But, I can still tell this vibrates slightly. I don't think it transfers much to the tonearm, but I'm still getting the maple platform.
I'm posting this because I've done some research oil Salamander as a TT stand, but didn't find much. So, now you know... buyer beware!
So, I found a used Salamander Chameleon Sonoma 326. It matches the other furniture perfectly, looks great in the room, and has a perfect amount of storage. And, room on top for the turntable, as well as the Primaluna HP. Makes it look like simple and elegant system. The Salamander is very heavy, and made from solid wood.
But, when I hooked it up, that damn Salamander rings like a bell, and that energy totally transfers to the tonearm. I could not believe how horrible the system now sounded! Clearly the furniture was the problem. It was immediate, and completely ruined the sound. I think part of the issue is that it has a metal frame beneath the wood, and the sides seem to cause the metal frame to vibrate and ring.
Now, I'm on an adventure to see if I can fix it. My plan is 2 inch thick maple platform with vibrapods under the platform. A platform for the amp, a separate one for the TT, and vibrapods under the phono preamp. I have used an old tabletop from Ikea (it's honeycomb inside, and good dampener) with rubber feet, and it's helped a lot. But, I can still tell this vibrates slightly. I don't think it transfers much to the tonearm, but I'm still getting the maple platform.
I'm posting this because I've done some research oil Salamander as a TT stand, but didn't find much. So, now you know... buyer beware!
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- 55 posts total
Agree that a maple platform with vibration damping feet underneath it will probably improve your situation. However, I have found that sandbox isolation is even better with my Acoustic Signature non suspended table. The maple platform has a sound of its own with pleasant resonances. The sandbox is more neutral and lets one hear deeper into the mix with a considerably greater sense of environmental isolation vis a vis the maple platform. I have used both 2" and 4" maple platforms and the sandbox is superior to both in my system. My previous rack was a Billy Bags Pro and I'm currently using a Solid Steel 5.4. http://http//cognitivevent.com/sandbox.html |
" An isolated turntable like a SOTA, SME, Basis or Air Force does not care what you put it on. It will always sound the same. Not that any stand a turntable is on should not be a sturdy as possible." |
I posted my experience so that others who wonder about this topic would have something to consider. If I listen to you crazies, this is what I should do: - $650 for aluminum balls under a platform - $400 for a 4 inch maple platform - Or $750 for the Gingko Cloud (looks interesting, actually) - another $650 for aluminum balls under the stand - $1500+ for a SOTA turntable - engineer my own stand that is heavy and works well. Oh, wait, already did that! LOL. I'm going to try the maple platform and vibrapod setup. If that doesn't work, I will go back to my own rack and call it a day. I can sell the Salamander for the $400 I paid. I bought it because I like how it looks... but if it kills the sound, it's gotta go. I can't invest $1000 to fix a $400 stand. You guys are just trying to make me spend my money! :-) |
- 55 posts total