Springs under turntable


I picked up a set of springs for $35 on Amazon. I intended to use them under a preamp but one thing led to another and I tried them under the turntable. Now, this is no mean feat. It’s a Garrard 401 in a 60pound 50mm slate plinth. The spring device is interesting. It’s sold under the Nobsound brand and is made up of two 45mm wide solid billets of aluminum endcaps with recesses to fit up to seven small springs. It’s very well made. You can add or remove springs depending on the weight distribution. I had to do this with a level and it only took a few minutes. They look good. I did not fit them for floor isolation as I have concrete. I played a few tracks before fitting, and played the same tracks after fitting. Improvement in bass definition, speed, air, inner detail, more space around instruments, nicer timbre and color. Pleasant surprise for little money.
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The springs isolate the vibrations from the speaker from exciting the floor - hence the cleaner sound -
I'd like to see this demonstrated in the laboratory.  Super high-speed cameras and interferometry techniques would do the trick.  If the floor remains static/stable, perhaps it's the speaker enclosure that gets excited.
Guys, I’ve been experimenting with springs in my system for years. I have, maybe, the hardest room type to get great sound out of with it being small and having larger than (I should) speakers in it.

What I’ve done has been a revelation for me. Check out my systems page.

Even within my decoupling platform for my amp/rack, I made an additional platform. The bottom is 3/4" MDF, the top is 3" maple. I recessed the springs into each mating surface at 1/8". The top of the maple platform is recessed to accept 3 halves of Symposium Rollerblock Jrs. The amp mates to the remaining halves. I’m using ceramic ball bearings in the Jrs.

I'm more about experimenting within my room by listening, the old school way.

A good fraction of the energy that causes speaker cabinets to vibrate is coming from the back wave(s) of the drivers in the box, which is an issue separate from holding the drivers stable in position and a reason for the many ported speaker cabinets, which is an attempt to dissipate the sonic energy without exciting the cabinet.  I've always favored Transmission Line woofers, partly for the reason that such designs excite the cabinet very little, resulting in a very clean output.  The only woofers or subwoofers that I have successfully mated with my ESL speakers have been TL types. The cabinets of my home-made TL woofers that I use with Beveridge 2SW speakers are constructed of 1.25" thick HDF and weigh about 100 lbs each.  They don't move.  But given the fact they are TLs to begin with, they aren't very excitable, either.  Maybe this helps explain why I say that there are two separate issues with vibration and resonance.
@mahgister,

I've experimented with weights on top of speakers in the past, not on springs and found that it's easy to overdamp the cabinet. Not always a good thing.
The box has to hold the body of the speaker stable so that the energy generated by the amplifier to move the cone is converted only into motion of the cone. This is never perfectly achieved, of course.
The answer to your question is in the "this is never perfectly achieved"...

There is some critical value where resonance and distortions increase, and a treshold under which the distortions and resonance dont implicate an audible effects...

Putting springs under speakers isolate so much well from the other speakers influence and from feed back effect from the floor and from other external vibrations, then the audible effect is beneficial because the movement of the cone is maintained under a critical threshold...The isolation from external influence is less detrimental to the cone movements than some internal resonance from the speakers box without isolation coming from these external factors ,especially from the other twin speaker in the room...

It is not the case when speakers are not isolated properly.... It is the reason why springs are very useful.... Before i use springs i was using my sandwiches of different materials, that was good damping and complementary coupling and decoupling but not so powerful radical decoupling than springs.....The audible effect was way better than using nothing, but a smearing of the sound subsisted that was erased by the presence of the springs....