My thoughts on TT isolation methods.


I have done extensive research on isolation platforms and with help from the Audiogon community plus many hours of listening. Its not scientific and I did not measure results but here it goes. I have tried MDF board, Granite with both and alone and cork and or neoprene rubber and truck bed material as sandwich material. Granite and marble are beautiful and mass loading. It would probably be OK for a suspension loaded TT but not as good a choice for a mass loaded TT like mine. I finally invested in a 4 inch maple slab and 4 cork rubber sandwich supports that is common in industrial machine dampening. Its better and doesn't give the sound as much detail. With detail. =harshness. Its the best I have found. With less edginess and no harshness but more neutral detail. You can use 2 MDF boards which come close. Ok, if you want the absolute best for an expensive TT get an electron microscope isolation device which costs in the thousands. You could get one for a much cheaper TT but at that point you should just invest more in a TT for more bang for the buck. I think thats what Michael Fremers 100k plus Caliburn TT comes with. Look at one of his videos. The other very low cost option is a sand box. I heard a TT in one before and it sounded great but that was a 30k Clearaudio TT. I almost went with that. I thought about suspending it from the ceiling but mine is 80 lbs. I hope this helps!
128x128blueranger
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No antigrunge2. It is not a feedback situation. If you put an oscilloscope on the output of your phono stage and place the stylus down on a record with the turntable off without adequate isolation you will see an varistey is low intensity low frequency signals that you will not see on a suspended table. Watch this all the way through.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rgK0YMsJXM
bdp24, The Townsend Seismic Pods are dampened compression springs
of various spring rates. They can certainly be useful under certain circumstances. You can place them under your turntable and if you order the right ones should be able to get your resonance frequency below 3 Hz. It might be a little wobbly but I have not used them so I really do not know. Certainly with an unsuspended table they should make an improvement. I do believe Townsend makes a platform which would be better to use under a turntable. 
It is my personal belief and experience that putting springs under amplifiers and speakers is not beneficial. My system certainly does not benefit from this. 
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