Peterayer, the suspension Fn on your tt is likely in the 1-3 Hz range. At least my Sota is around that. So you can maybe measure it with a stopwatch since it is slow enough. Just excite your plinth and try to count as many cycles as you can while running a stopwatch. Then just divide the no. of cycles you counted by the time on the stopwatch. What Geoffkait says is possible. If the Fn's of both the tt and the platform are the same, then they can excite each other and if they get 180 degrees out of phase, then be ready to catch your tt. :) When you excite your plinth by pushing down on it, just watch to see what the platform does. Maybe it is dampened so that it does not respond to the tt mass moving up and down.
Isolation Platform for my Sota Cosmos?
Delving into the murky waters of all things Isolation Platforms to complement my Sota Cosmos turntable to try to understand which - if any - isolation platform would work best with my Sota Cosmos turntable - which is a suspended turntable. The Cosmos already has great isolation qualities so i am wondering if there is actually anything out there that could improve the sound quality from this TT. Any suggestions? Thank You
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- 26 posts total
- 26 posts total