In the sand box


I have 2 audio buddies who have built component sandboxes with different types of sand. They claim Beach sand is the most dense and made a huge difference when the turntable and amp were set in them. Has anyone else been down this road? I mean there are several ways to isolate equipment, this is just one of many.

hilroy48

 

There is a thread started on 3-27-2020 by @soma70 entitled "Sandbox Design Advice". In it I recommended silica sand, a non-organic, man-made material used in sandblasting. Silica sand is superior to play sand for this application in that it doesn’t absorb moisture, and is therefore incapable of supporting the growth of bacteria.

Silica comes in different "grades", just like lead shot. When I was using the Bright Star Big Rock isolation boxes, I settled on No. 60 grade sand. It is the optimum size, anything smaller (the particle size, a larger number connoting a smaller size grain) being too powdery.

I found Silica at a construction supply yard, but I think even Home Depot sells it. It’s cheap, like under ten bucks for a fifty pound bag (this was twenty years ago).

 

Years ago there was a product that was a sand box with a shelf fitted on top of the sand (I think that was made by Bright Star, as bdp 24 mentions).  I used a pair under my Jadis amplifiers, they were effective at isolating the amps from floor vibrations.  I used play sand.  Seems to me you could make one pretty easily and inexpensively too.  Bdp24's advice is sound, wish I had used silica sand, as the play sand did get a little damp. 

I'd avoid quicksand at any cost.  A few years ago my DAC was swallowed whole, never to be seen again.  Tragically, this incident occurred in clear view of my grandkids.  Counseling can get very expensive.

Grand sand animates the playing of the grand for less than a grand paid by an aging grand.

I like placebo sand mixed with some psychoacoustic pebbles.   Then a pure white quartz crystal directly over the amp's transformer.

I also have a shaman come in and perform some cool looking stuff that aligns the polarity of the electrons.