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.
noromance
Congratulations millercarbon....

I own the same set of springs boxes, and the right compression of the springs is very important, i know you know it for sure... i say it for all those who wil buy them....

It takes me 4 trying listening to get it right...

I have around 70 pounds of concrete slabs on top of my speakers, then i think they are pretty optimally compressed with more than 80 pounds on the springs, and when it is right, no defects in the high extension and the bass of my 7 inches drivers is feeled in my chest, the mid frequencies are perfect ....For the turntable it is easy to take off the right amount of springs for the optimal compression...(for my speakers i like them damped ). A variation around 4 of 5 pounds in compressive force is easily audible without problem....

My "sandwichs" of quartz,granite sorbothane, bamboo and cork was great, but when you miss something, you are not always conscious of what you miss, and the sound was smeared not much but enough to create a too much compress mid frequencies and less of extension in the high frequencies and a smeared bass also... .... With the springs smearing of the sound decreased enormously and all is clear but with sweet and warm mid frequencies....

The sound of my Mission speakers is celestial now....They compete the Moabs and i pay them 50 bucks used.... :)

These springs are a bargain....
Most interesting thread, read it all and it stayed 99.9% civil. Excellent considering the subject matter.

So about 6 months ago I experimented with springs under my 401 which is similar to noromance at about 55lb total weight.

There may have been a little more air at the top but to my ears it lost mid and bass impact. Not huge but enough to be noticeable.
Now to be fair these were springs I had bought on eBay after spending a lot of time with a spring calculator trying to make sure I got the best set-up.
Quite possibly I missed the mark.
Those springs are now under a sub.
Just ordered 2 sets of the Nobsound sets off Amazon at $32.99 a set.
These I can tune so now have options.
Many thanks guys!
There may have been a little more air at the top but to my ears it lost mid and bass impact. Not huge but enough to be noticeable.
This is a sign the springs were probably under not enough compression...

It takes me 4 trying to adjust the springs box nobsound....
@mijostyn
"When correct implementation of zero stiffness on loudspeakers is administered, there is no question of the superiority of this engineering practice on the voicing of the loudspeaker." (rixthetrick)

rixthetrick, What is zero stiffness? That is a term I have never heard before. How is superior when it comes to "voicing" a loudspeaker.

My father would have asked me if I'd bothered to look it up, before he'd answer such a complex question.

Zero stiffness:
http://www2.eng.cam.ac.uk/~sdg/preprint/OnZeroStiffness.pdf

As others have already mentioned, the effects of correctly implementing vibration isolation, is audibly heard. Correctly done, it's immediately recognized. And I don't need to prove it, you can do it for yourself, for really cheap. However, you need to know something about what you're doing.

For example the springs in your car/truck/motorcycle are rated specifically for that device. It smooths out the ride, it doesn't completely make it linear. Zero Stiffness is an ideal.

If you have electrostatic speakers (with their own limitations) or dipole speakers (with their own limitations) this is not likely (I would guess) to have nearly as much impact as an enclosure that is ported or sealed.

In most cases, I believe it's not the inertia of the small moving mass of the cone and voice coil that creates the most stored energy in a loudspeaker cabinet. I believe it is the sudden high and low pressure created by the drivers moving air within the cabinet (even a ported cabinet should see this pressure difference) that will deform the walls of the cabinet. It's not just pushing or pulling against the walls, it's doing both at a frequency that excites the cabinet.

Lewm mentioned transmission line woofers, I can see your logic,  and it makes sense. Have you tried isolation anyway?