Big sub-woofer sitting on carpet HELP


That's right I have a big sub-woofer (Velodyne HGS 15) sitting on a carpeted slab floor. I'm thinking I should set it up on some points and maybe top load it with say 20 lbs. of lead shot. Any one agree? Disagree? Have any better suggestions? Let’s talk turkey:~)
128x128glen
Hard to tell. Did it come with legs or whatever?? I have a REL Q100E in my HT system. It is a cube that was designed to sit on the floor. It has a place to screw in spikes on the bottom, but REL and the US importer Sumiko who I checked with said that unless I had an over active floor that was very boomy in its own right, to not use spikes or other feet. Check with Velodyne or a dealer you trust.
I have a Velodyne also, and I added four screw in audio points which definitely improved its sound over the four little rubber feet that are attached by one small nail each. This was done in my dedicated sound room located in my basement, concrete floor, carpeted. I purchased the mega points used on Audiogon and have four extra, email me if you're interested. I can't recall the name brand at the moment however if you are interested I could check when I get home.
I had a big Velodyne and had problems with boomyness and intergration. Under the advice of my local hifi store I put it on a six inch stand. WOW! What a difference. It cleaned up the sound and made it blend a lot better. I put it on a box but if you like the sound there are small stands out there that also look good.
What have I been smoking? This piece does have 4 tiny feet on it. I never noticed them till I flipped the amp up to have a look. Hmmm what to do now? I'm not saying I'm not happy. I just wonder if I could be happier:~)
I have the same woofer and I had an unfortunate accident with some brass spikes that I installed. Or may it was the 40 lbs. of lead shot that I laid inside the cabinet. Anywise, I drilled the bottom of the cabinet and screwed in some inserts and then screwed in the cone spikes. One day I was positioning and I didn't lift enough and it ripped one of the spikes out with a chunk of the bottom. As I looked at the material that they used to make the cabinet it resembles crunched up cardboard. It is probably great for sound deadening but terrible for supporting spikes and 110 lbs. of speaker. I repaired the damage with marine resin and bought a set of three huge Maple Shade spikes that have three small spikes on top. They have worked fantastic and I highly recommend them. But bypass the drill and inserting of threaded spikes. Dale