I think spikes have more to do with bass energy in the cabinet than movement. Take a look at Vandersteen model 2 speakers while playing music with a lot of bass energy. Even with the speaker sitting on stands with spikes the top of the speaker has an enormous amount of movement. There used to be a product on the market called Microscan. It was a resonance control device that attached to the back of the speaker cabinet. The perceived improvement was better upper frequencies, however, this was due to draining resonance from the cabinet and removing unwanted lower frequencies.
Spikes have different affects in different situations depending on the speaker, system and the type of floor. If Dynaudio only supplies one type of spike for their speakers they have apparently voiced their speaker that way.
Starting with the CD3 MKII Audio Research has built in isolation so their CD player sounds the same regardless of what the CD player is sitting on. I guess this is their way of controlling the sound since the sound of a component can change dramatically depending on what it is sitting on. Maybe this is what Dynaudio is attempting to do also.
Spikes have different affects in different situations depending on the speaker, system and the type of floor. If Dynaudio only supplies one type of spike for their speakers they have apparently voiced their speaker that way.
Starting with the CD3 MKII Audio Research has built in isolation so their CD player sounds the same regardless of what the CD player is sitting on. I guess this is their way of controlling the sound since the sound of a component can change dramatically depending on what it is sitting on. Maybe this is what Dynaudio is attempting to do also.