Can an audio rack be that important?


When we spend Tens of thousands on audio equipment are we losing sight on the importance of a good audio rack? I have seen many setups were ultra high end audio equipment is used sub-par equipment racks. 
I have been grappling with buying a high end audio rack for sometime but have always put it off as less important. 
What does a reference rack actually do for the sound of high quality components?

 

hiendmmoe

rack investment is a relative thing to where you are on the system building path. no one size fits all.

1-to begin with put your gear on the floor and invest your money in the best pair of speakers you can afford. that is the quickest path to the best sound. if your significant other wants the gear on some nice piece of furniture don’t worry about it too much.

2-as your system improves the most cost efficient rack approach is to get a basic rack and treat the individual chassis with footers to isolate the gear from resonance. but here it gets complicated because your floor is always a part of the rack equation as far as performance. so look at it as floor+rack=result.

3---past a certain point where you have your speakers and gear selected, with decent signal cables and power cables, next is your acoustics, power grid, and then rack performance.

so rack issues are not top of list, but they are on the list as you try to optimize your system. better acoustics, amps, sources, cables and power grid will take you farther in performance than a nice rack. until you deal with those other things first, a pretty sexy rack is assets miss-placed. a reference rack is very expensive, and very hard to sell or ship. so make sure your system is mature and settled before you take that step. treating individual components with footers (maybe DIY footers) might get you by and you can avoid an expensive rack all together.

i have a mega buck system and use basic racks at the highest levels of performance. but i also have some superb active isolation, just not expensive racks.

Not unlike a good speaker stand - solidity, stability, mass, and damping.  Give your equipment stable, solid, damped support and let your choice of footers and mass loading do the rest.  
I use a combination of very solid and heavy wood furniture, and a Sound Anchors steel stand that is sand-filled for damping, and supported on elastomeric footers.

If I had a bunch of money to spend, one ot these would be nice.

Nothing really for sound.  Your equipment needs to be well supported and springs can help isolate equipment.  Heat needs to be managed.  I just had a custom rack made for $300 or so. 

love the look of the one pictured above.  but you can get good sound from any rack you can make fit your system as I described above.  

Focus on other things.  If you've already done everything else, a beautiful rack compleiments a beautiful system.

Jerry

They definitely make a sonic difference. I had a 4-shelf basic target rack for years, and when I got the Adona, the change was very audible. More stable imaging, and everything seemed more grounded. I also use different footers in addition to the rack. I love the look too, and the shelves are infinitely adjustable.

Audio Racks, Modular Audio Video Furniture and Isolation Platforms at Adona Corporation.