SVS Subwoofer Isolation feet. Will I lose bass?


Most of what I see about subwoofer isolation has to do with minimizing rattles or bothering the neighbors.  But what about a sealed subwoofer on a concrete slab?  Would these dampeners not "dampen" the bass as well?

My setup...  Dual SVS SB16s on a concrete slab.  I don't have a rattle problem and the room is 20ft tall so I can't afford to "lose" bass because of my shakey rubbery feet.  

I've read and seen many great things about these but I have a hunch it would hurt a sealed sub on a slab more than help.

dtximages
So....i have an SVS SB16 and have it on a carpeted floor. Tried it without feet and the bass was bloated. The SVS feet helped tighten things up with not a significant loss. I then went to isoacoustic Gaia II with carpet spikes and everything is significantly tighter/cleaner than the SVS but you lose some of the chest rattle. 

My vote would be: If your looking for musicality the isoacoustic is the way to go. Dual purpose for music and theater the SVS feet are fine and enough of an improvement to atleast compensate for moderate cost. 
Good illustration of how carpets act as springs. Two spring systems one on top of the other is bad news. It’s like driving down the road in a car with two springs one on top of the other for each wheel.. It will be a very b-b-bumpy ride.
Stopped me being yelled at by my wife upstairs. The bass was transmitting up the walls. Much much better after I put them on 
I run 2 SVS SB16Ultras and 2 SVS PB13Ultras. All are on the SVS isolation feet. Theater is on the second floor so I'm not on concrete but I did not lose any low end and as mentioned before the sound tightened up. Not to mention I run these subs at a gain of -24 and can still rattle light fixtures, doors, etc.... if wanted. With SVS typically if you lose some bass you have plenty of gain headroom.

I also have the Townshend platforms under Focal Utopia Maestro towers. I have no idea how the springs in these things are engineered but they are game changers.