Turntable stand, steel, aluminum,shelves of ?


What do you use for your table, cost no object. The weight of your table; sprung or pointed. Which arms, cartridges and why you chose the stand you did. Filled with sand, lead and a vibration transfer medium such as oil etc. Your opinions are important , as I am about to build my own.

thanks , Ken
kftool
Salectric, do you use the buttons under the Gavia spikes?

I have built a stand utilizing sandboxes with hard maple shelves. I first tried my Gavia (just arrived Wednesday!) directly on the maple the sound seemed to muffled so I put the buttons under the spikes and did make an improvement. It is possible that I made this swap too soon as the table only had 2 or 3 hours on it at the time. I may also try a sheet of aluminum on top of the maple shelf to see if that makes a difference.

Point here is that it is possible to tune what ever you end up building as long as you haven't backed into a corner. I.e., with the sandboxes dampening things, I could experiment with either stone or metal shelves. I'm not saying that this is the only way to go, just offering food for thought. Keep your options open if you're building your own rack.
Dan, I don't use the buttons under my Gavia because I don't use the spikes. I have the turntable base sitting directly on whatever plinth I am using at the time. Same thing for the motor pod.

At various times I've tried the spikes Thom supplied, and I have also tried AudioPoint spikes. But each time I have preferred the sound without any spikes.

I am sure you will enjoy getting to know your new table. For such a simple looking device, there are lots of things you can do to tweak the sound to get it the way you like.

I had the privilege of visiting another new Gavia owner a couple days ago, and I heard the same Gavia/Triplanar combo. It sounded great! And the black anodizing looks terrific.

Dave
Interesting idea about no spikes, Dave. And thanks for the tip on the battery!

This afternoon I picked up a sheet of 16 guage steel and .032 aluminum and placed these on top of the maple with the spikes into the metal. Really improved the attack on piano notes, bells and cymbols.

It occured to me that this is alot like tube rolling. Different configurations can change the sound, then you have to decide if you like the change or not.
KFTool,

I do have the Io Signature with volume controls at latest production revs. I love it. My system is posted at http://cgi.audioasylum.com/systems/1616.html. My music tastes are Classical, Jazz, Blues, female vocals, not much rock. The Aesthetix's musical voice (IHO) suits this perfectly perfectly. It's always difficult to communicate one's own enjoyment to another because there so many factors influencing it. Here's what I like about the Aesthetix - it has a very natural sound in all respects: Focus without edginess; Macro and micro dynamics; Warmth without bloom; Natural performance height and width on all types of music; Works very well with my Koetsu Oynix Platinum Signature's low output with being noisey. Bottom line its the I have ever heard in my system.

Negatives are, costs, sapce, and number of tubes (if you're a NOS type).

enjoy the music,
GerryM5