If the shelf is "cracked glass", chances are the shelf is a laminated unit of 3 seperate pieces of glass fused together with a clear rubber-like innerliner. The unit is heated in an autoclave to melt the innerliner and fuse the peices together. The "cracked" part would be a piece of shattered tempered glass in the center position. You could justify that the rubber innerliner could have dampening properties but that alone does not assure a good performance.
Opinions on Glass Shelves
I am thinking about buying a new audio rack. When I tap on the shelf below the shelf on which my turntable sits while the needle is on an LP at rest, I can hear the a slight echo in my speakers.
I’ve looked into various audio racks including some from Billy Bags. The salesperson at Billy Bags told me that their ¾” cracked glass was sound-deadening and would provide excellent sound isolation. To me this is counterintuitive.
Has anyone had any experience with cracked glass from Billy Bags?
Has anyone had any experience with glass shelves in general?
I’ve looked into various audio racks including some from Billy Bags. The salesperson at Billy Bags told me that their ¾” cracked glass was sound-deadening and would provide excellent sound isolation. To me this is counterintuitive.
Has anyone had any experience with cracked glass from Billy Bags?
Has anyone had any experience with glass shelves in general?
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- 11 posts total
- 11 posts total