Thuchan,
The Toho base is an excellent, heavy base. The issue is not so much one of moving by hundredths of a millimeter as the fact that it may flex or resonate at a different frequency or 'offset' (the timing of the when the wave crosses the zero point) than the table does. Thebase (and its footers) may react differently to flexion or resonance of the platform that it shares with the Continuum than the Continuum does. The plastic thing - whatever it is - between them will not link them so that they share whatever internal resonance they have.
At least that would be the theory of the downside to separates which were nonetheless supremely stable in their own right - the problem which Micro Seikis and the Kenwood L-07D, to some extent the Exclusive P3, and other tables sought to address.
The Toho base is an excellent, heavy base. The issue is not so much one of moving by hundredths of a millimeter as the fact that it may flex or resonate at a different frequency or 'offset' (the timing of the when the wave crosses the zero point) than the table does. Thebase (and its footers) may react differently to flexion or resonance of the platform that it shares with the Continuum than the Continuum does. The plastic thing - whatever it is - between them will not link them so that they share whatever internal resonance they have.
At least that would be the theory of the downside to separates which were nonetheless supremely stable in their own right - the problem which Micro Seikis and the Kenwood L-07D, to some extent the Exclusive P3, and other tables sought to address.