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My room has a thin carpet on top of a suspended wood floor. I bought a 10" subwoofer about a month ago. I thought it was very bomy.I guess the best thing would be to have sorbothane feet underneath a marble slab for a base.
If possible, brace the floor under the sub with a column. Parts are available from home centers to make a 4x4 wood column with threaded jack. It's not very expensive, and very effective.
A spike is a mechanical diode which lets the vibration of the sub box itself drain away instantly to down to the floor
Which is exactly why you would not spike a sub to a suspended floor. The idea is to de-couple, or isolate the subwoofer cabinet energy from the suspended floor.Spikes could be used on the bottom of an energy draining isolation stand where the stand does most of the work, but that's going to cost more than the simple Auralex solution.
So explain to me how a $60 Auralex wood base can handle such both vibrations?
I don't have a problem with spikes (even though I find them difficult to use), I just don't think they should be used to couple energy to a suspended floor. A suspended floor will just send that energy into the walls and create a delayed, muddy bass sound. This has been my experience at my house, anyway. I hope that makes more sense.
If yr budget is so limited, why don't you DIY one yourself cheapie & easy rather than buying some Auralex base board for $60 or more??c-J
.......nearly all those very costly (in a few grand price range) hi-teck brandname audio stands ALL get steel spikes for enchoring the stand on the floor, be it concrete or suspended wooden or whatever. So you think their manufacaturers don't know they are building?
I hear you man. It can be very confusing trying to sort this stuff out. I am certainly no expert.The manufacturer doesn't know if you hang out in your basement or sit upstairs in the loft, so I think it's up to us to determine whether or not the spikes are helpful or harmful.I think if a stand (or any audio support structure) is proactive in absorbing vibrations or setting up some kind of isolation scenario, then it is probably ok to spike that stand to a suspended floor for further stability. But if the stand is just a rigid sructure, then probably not.The only way to find out is to experiment. Trial and error is my friend.
Rollo, on ACS recommendation on raising sub up 22% of ceiling hight, do you know if that is from top, center or bottom of sub? If sub is up firing would that be to top of sub? Mike
how can such baseboard handle vibration of the subwoofer box itself which should be reduced or killed to provide clean bass as a matter of course.c-J
If you think a $60 wood baseboard alone can do the job OK, why bother anything else? My question still remain unanswered:- how can such baseboard handle vibration of the subwoofer box itself which should be reduced or killed to provide clean bass as a matter of course.c-J
Carpet on a suspended floor. Yes, I know the feeling very well.Here's one idea that won't cost you much to experiment with http://www.amazon.com/Auralex-Subwoofer-Isolation-15x15x3-inch-Charcoal/dp/B001140OZ0