Dear Halcro, T_bone and Atmasphere only seem to postulate opposite positions. Whether you actually mount with screws or with spikes and high weight can result in the very same.
So your spikes are actually VERY tight a coupling to the platform (even if you can move the armpods if you wish...). The coupling force is the weight of the armpod (hopefully pretty high) divided by the touching area of your spike (very small ... ) - so the resulting coupling force is pretty high.
However with the kind of weight we are talking generally in audio components, spikes are less tightly an mounting option than a good solid screw. After all it is about coupling two masses together without possible movement of one in relation towards the other.
Armpod(s) and bearing/turntable can hardly be DECOUPLED from each other in the sense that would allow relative movement of one towards the other (which would be the very sense of "decoupling"). One can incorporate kinds of resonance-barriers between them, but they will always (or better: should...) be coupled towards each other.
This can be via a shelf, plinth, skeleton - whatever.
I think T_bone, Atmasphere, (me too ...) are talking about the very same thing in slightly different word.
Cheers,
D.
So your spikes are actually VERY tight a coupling to the platform (even if you can move the armpods if you wish...). The coupling force is the weight of the armpod (hopefully pretty high) divided by the touching area of your spike (very small ... ) - so the resulting coupling force is pretty high.
However with the kind of weight we are talking generally in audio components, spikes are less tightly an mounting option than a good solid screw. After all it is about coupling two masses together without possible movement of one in relation towards the other.
Armpod(s) and bearing/turntable can hardly be DECOUPLED from each other in the sense that would allow relative movement of one towards the other (which would be the very sense of "decoupling"). One can incorporate kinds of resonance-barriers between them, but they will always (or better: should...) be coupled towards each other.
This can be via a shelf, plinth, skeleton - whatever.
I think T_bone, Atmasphere, (me too ...) are talking about the very same thing in slightly different word.
Cheers,
D.