... sound batting and/or weighting speakers ...


Hello to all... 

Need some thoughts and/or suggestions: I am using a pair of KEF Q1s - luv the sound, so much more full than I ever expected - and the driver has such cone extension that the speaker box really vibrates. Now - I am assuming that the vibration really = the possibility of distortion ( or a smearing at higher volumes, tonal deformity, if that is different) and I am wondering if this is more controllable by:
Adding more sound batting into the enclosure (thru the bass port)
Weighting the speakers with a bag of lead shot (?) over the top of the driver/cabinet box ( the cabinet is not flat on top, so I can't use a brick or solid weight; I'm guessing the weight should be something moldable, so the lead shot in a bag is possible if I can figure a way to affix it to the cabinet...)

Thoughts? Suggestions? Alternates?
insearchofprat
At the very least I guess you can look at this as a learning opportunity. You are right, if the whole speaker cabinet is moving that is dissipating energy you want coming out of the driver. So its robbing you of dynamics. Also if the speaker wasn't so loud you could hear the sound coming from the cabinet itself, which is smearing and robbing you of detail. This is why all the very best speakers are so thick, solid, and massive. Ideally you want no vibration anywhere at all except from the driver. 

You can try several blobs of Blue Tack to hold the speakers in place. Or BDR Cones which are another better form of vibration control. Either way yes lead shot in a bag will add mass. Lead shot in a bag however is more damping than controlling. Only way to know is to try and hear how it sounds. This is why all these tweaks should be considered learning. Which is a great thing to do in its own right, especially if you keep it cheap, simple, and reversible.
G R Research No Rez. You will have to remove the drivers and cut to fit before installing.  I have done a few pairs of speakers with it, It will tighten up the bass and reduce the resonating.
Careful disassembly with Dynamat or similar product applied inside cabinet, overlapping seam on corners may help a bit.
Predominantly driver distortion, and tweaking, treating the cabinet will do little to address it. Move on, go find much better, because imo this is a very compromised design and there are worlds of improvement available on used and new market.