DIY concrete stands


I've been fooling around with DIY stands made of concrete block.

I first made two speaker stands for my gf. Each stand was 3 blocks, sealed together with white grout. I used a thin wood veneer on the bottoms, to which I attached felt sliding feet. On the top, so far, I just have a thin cardboard piece, and the speaker resting on that.

I planned on wrapping a fabric around the stands to hide the concrete block work. The funny thing is, they look really cool. They're on wood floors, with rich tapestry burgundy/gold curtains behind them. And with almost no gap between the blocks, and black Paradigm Studio 20's resting on top, they look more stark-modernist than white-trash. Weird. My gf won't let me cover them with fabric.

I also made myself an amp stand out of two solid concrete blocks. I have the blocks sitting on a thin cardboad pice (so they don't scratch the floor) and my amp sitting on styrofoam peanuts (crushed beyond visibility) on the blocks. I don't know for sure if there is a difference in the sound (it's a ss integrated, after all) but it's kinda cool. Again, it's sitting in a refined and polished surround. In that setting, with a pretty amp on top, the raw concrete slabs actually make a blunt aesthetic statement.

Anyway, the only thing that's cheesy about the speaker stands is the feet (the felt sliders) and the top (cardboard, right now). They look cheap (and they were!). I'm wondering what I should do. I'm thinking of getting thin steel plates, which I paint black and attach to each end, then fixing adjustable feet to the bottom, and mounting the speaker with blu tack on the top. But where do I get adjustable feet? Especially cones or spikes?

Even with the felt sliders, these stands are solid! And total cost was $25 bucks and about 2 hrs of labor (me... clueless at that).

Is there anything wrong with using conrete to stabilize gear? Mass is resistance to acceleration, and it's a lot of mass... cheap.
qualia8
You can always stain the concrete blocks with concrete stain (available in a variety of colors and neutrals,) then seal them with Thompsons masonry seal. This will even out the color and keep the blocks from "dusting." Also, you can go to a masonry yard and find "cap" blocks that only have holes on one side.

Use thin foam sheets as Rich suggests, instead of cardboard, as cardboard absorbs moisture and (even a little) can ruin the wood floor.
funny, i was thinking of using concrete as well (for amp. stands)...using 3 mapleshade cones...OR 3 wooden cones/balls...the ones they sell at home depot, the ones that sit on top of 4x4 post/stubs
i turn them upside down...with the flat surface against the concret slab and the pointed top or ball touching the floor...
also, as for speaker stands...i was thinking of using TREE stumps...(of proper diameter of course)
has anyone tried this...IMHO they offer better mass than your typical speaker stands...
anyways, just a thought

happy holidays..
Thanks everyone for the replies. Rich, your stands look *way* cool. I did check out the glass blocks as well, but I was thinking of wrapping them in fabric at the time. (I had in mind just a satin-y type of fabric pinned in the back, and maybe black.)

I also thought about a slab of slate for the ends. Cap block is a good idea. As is rubber. And I'll check out the cement stains. I didn't even know that existed.

A trip to the local mega-hardware store is really enlightening. Mass, in the form of sand or cement, is so darn cheap! I can't see (with my salary) paying hundreds of $ for an amp stand that doesn't weigh as much and isn't as steady as $3 worth of cement block.

I've just made an offer on a tube pre, so I think I'm going to check try to fit some cones to the bottom of that solid concrete block and make that an amp stand.

I'm also going to talk to my dad over Christmas about a wooden amp stand. He makes banded cutting boards out of eucalyptus. They're pretty thick, but I'm guessing he could make them thicker. I'll suggest that extra thickness and mounting it on cones. I'll let you know how it goes. Maybe there would be a market for it here on Audiogon. The cutting boards are really beautiful.
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Should be fine.

picked up a 4 inch granite square from a home improvement shop for my TT.
IF IT GETS rid of vibration, don’t know, but looks nice.

also a pair of matching butcher blocks for my amps, they look nice on a nice hunk of cherry stained wood stands.