0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 29912 times.
Well, I've been spinning LPs for 45 years and have had many tables. Perhaps the solid surface a granite base provides, exposes the poor quality of some of the sprung tables that you have used. Because they are sprung, they have a resonance frequency.I will continue to use my granite bass and recommend that to anyone with a table.Wayner
Well said, Jerome. The chemist can conclude scientifically exactly how much salt you should add to your soup and some people will faithfully follow that advice to the point of buying a scale that measures micrograms. Others will simply introduce enough salt to please their taste. Both emerge happy and well nourished. Which one used the correct approach?
Well, here's a theory. I have no engineering training but my imagination is fertile and my mind restless. Here goes:Is it possible that, just as a tweeter cannot reproduce low frequencies, our lightweight stand cannot either? Maybe the wimpy stand works because it cannot pass low frequencies due to its lack of mass. I'm not prepared to defend this concept because I have no idea about its validity. Just musing......P.S. I bought my first L.P. in 1957 which makes it likelier that my guess is correct.
How do low frequencies not effect a light weight stand?It "rejects" them?What does this mean? Does it mean a light weight stand somehow does not vibrate from LF? If so...why is that, and why is something that has greater mass more prone to vibrations from LF. Doesn't make sense.I surely am confused.
Quote from: toobluvr on 25 Oct 2009, 03:25 pmHow do low frequencies not effect a light weight stand?It "rejects" them?What does this mean? Does it mean a light weight stand somehow does not vibrate from LF? If so...why is that, and why is something that has greater mass more prone to vibrations from LF. Doesn't make sense.I surely am confused. Makes perfect sense. The lightweight object has higher resonant frequency due to its construction. It does not resonate at a low frequency like a heavier object will. Physics at its finest.
The pragmatist in me keeps suggesting that this is not as big a problem as what it might appear to be at first glance.Here's a quick test. Put a record on that has good bass response. Place a couple of fingers gently on the frame of your turntable with the record playing. I have a pretty massive table and on a record like Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures I can most certainly feel the thump of Peter Hook's bass lines on the frame of my deck. My SOTA is a suspended spring loaded turntable so I don't know how much of that energy is reaching the platter -- perhaps some but not all. However, I used to own a Rega P7 mounted on the same stand. The Rega has no damping and I did the same experiment back then and could still feel the bass thumping on the frame of the deck. I can tell you that the Rega was a nice sounding turntable and I was not unhappy with it. I bought the SOTA because, well because I an opportunity came a long to buy one at a great price so I jumped at the chance.If someone were to ask me "Would you rather not feel that bass thump on the frame of your table when records are playing?"....I would probably answer "Sure, who wouldn't." If someone were say to me that my turntable would sound a lot better if I did, then I would ask "Better than what?" I am happy with the sound of my deck the way it is, so I don't perceive that I have a problem in need of a solution. Records sound fantastic on my turntable, and that is what it's all about as far as I am concerned.--Jerome
I agree that a stable platform is important for a turntable...but I also think there are many ways to achieve the desired stability
QuoteI agree that a stable platform is important for a turntable...but I also think there are many ways to achieve the desired stabilityWell said......I do understand what Mr. Wood's saying.......metal tends to transmitter, and wood tends to absorb and dissipate energy. In reality, there's no way that one can isolate a turntable 100% from outside interference, so just filter it out with light and rigid stand if the table is light. If the table itself is dense and heavy, it makes no sense to put it on a light weight stand, it would wobble.