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No secondary function at all! raising the speaker to optimum listening height is really the only purpose for a stand. It is all of the sonic discrepancies that they introduce while elevating it that forces us to make critical decisions on what materials to use and what way to implement them.
Andy, if you are right that there is energy disappearing between the speakers and the floor, I would imagine that it is due to two things. Firstly, due to greater flex of the aluminium. Secondly, due to more efficient damping (aluminium will resonate at a higher frequency than steel and this is easier to damp). This last reason is why "light & stiff" equipment racks are preferred by many people ... they are easier to excite but will resonate at a higher frequency and lower amplitude and are easier to damp.
BTW, aluminium is stiffer than steel! So if the ally legs were the same length as the steel ones, they would flex less ... but because they're splayed, they're longer and so may flex more.
Andy, it is the other way around. Steel has greater stiffness than aluminium which is relatively flexible.
Is this true?
I also think solid wood stands would be superior to metal because sound travels faster through metal than wood and metal would resonate at a higher frequency the would be (according to the Fletcher Munson Curve) more detectable by the human ear.
...it allows me to maintain the mass to volume ratio resulting in less resistance to tipping and better sound dampening qualities. ...
The reason for filling steel tube with sand or lead shot is to dampen it - otherwise the steel tube would ring when excited by particular frequencies.
However, I believe the only thing that sand or lead shot does is increase the mass of the tube ... so this increased mass is excited less (compared to a lighter, unfilled tube). To my simple mind, this is "damping by secondary means" (adding mass) - whereas wrapping the tube with something like Dynamat Extreme is "damping by primary means" (forming a CLD structure).
The two methods you mention (Dynamat & lead shot) will both damp resonance by transferring energy to heat. I would imagine that in the case of lead shot filled stands, the minute resonance waves sent through the stand legs would be trying to physically move the lead shot particles that rest against their surfaces, so some resonant energy may be being transferred into 'work' as well.
Is the fact that the stand legs might vibrate, an issue?
if you have a massive, ground-floor slab then the same level of vibration frequency (in the 50-500Hz region?) that would excite a suspended sheet floor would not do anything to the slab ... so if the stands can drain away cabinet vibrations, this should be doing some good?
Phil: You might also remember that the cross section of the aluminum tubes used was much larger than the steel tubes. The overall result was a stiffer frame.And, yeah, they did tend to beat one up more.Larry