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Great thread. A sticky candidate, well see. I had seen these previously, but having your experiences detailed makes all the difference. I'm using maple blocks now, I'll either add or replace depending on how it sounds.
OK This stuff is super handy if you want to tilt speakers or something but are afraid they'll slip from bass or whatever. I've got bookshelves on top of a "stand" that's got a flat top and I titled the stand back to get better response in my room. The problem was they wanted to slip off during high bass music. I use this stuff between my "footers" and the stand. (The footers aren't attached, but work perfect, and are not spikes)It doesn't bat an eye at some steep angles and moderate weight bookshelves (much heavier than light ones like Paradigm or Elac's cheap ones)
Here's a link to super inexpensive isolation pads.http://www.supplyhouse.com/DiversiTech-MP-2E-EVA-Anti-Vibration-Pad-2-x-2-x-7-8I just ordered a box of 48. Why? Well in my quest to experiment with isolation feet on my speakers I tried some of these I already owned last night and was shocked how well they work. I had been considering the Iso Acoustics Gaia I feet, but at $600 per set of 4 I wasn't going to buy and then see if they would make a positive change.I already have plenty of the cork layered with rubber pads in my spare parts box and I happened to have 8 of these last night. So I tried these as they are more compliant and was very pleased with the improved bass and clarity of the sound. So now I will go after the Gaia I's down the road for sure.But since these work so well I am planning on putting them under each 3" thick maple shelf I have and a box of 48 is only $21.60. You have seen plenty of folks selling these on Audiogon and US Audio Mart for $4 each which sounds cheap until you find them at $0.50 each. I lost the link to the last place I purchased from, so I found a new HVAC site that has them cheap. I also have these under my furnace like many of you have and they really keep it quiet.
Still not compliant enough for most gear. The smallest is 2" x 2" and rated at 50 psi, which means each is rated to handle up to 200 pounds. So I'd guess you'd want to load it with 150 pounds. So three or four of them would ideally support 500 - 600 pound components/speakers. Perhaps they could be cut into smaller pieces (1/2" x 1/2" would support 12 pounds each, 1" x 1" would support 50 pounds each).
In 40 years of being an audiophile, my scale of effectiveness for better sound reproduction:Components, room (and treatments if needed), recordings....... 1.00Cables................................. ....................................... ....... 0.05Tweaks................................. ....................................... ...... 0.00
My "tweak" of the day suggestion would be to try near-field listening...Start with a 6 foot/2 meter equilateral triangle and experiment from there. Currently I have my main speakers 10 feet apart (1.5 feet from side walls) and 7 feet from the listening position (about a 120 degree arc) with the speakers severely toed in (crossing 1.5 feet in front of the listening position) to maximize soundstage width.IMO makes more difference than any cable or tweak...