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At the risk of exposing my ignorance, how do you all measure resonance that gets picked up by the stylus? It would seem logical that one would want to determine this precisely before spending alot of time and money mitigating a problem that might not exist or if it does it could be under your tolerance threshold. It seems to me placing a table on two different shelves and listening for sonic differences would add too large of a subjective component to any conclusion.In my case I had no placement flexibility and had to place my TT on the top shelf of a large custom made solid oak cabinet. My floors are wood with thick carpet. I chose the VPI Classic because Harry Weisfeld has tested it sitting on a shelf next to a pair of 15" woofers and it manifested no measureable resonance. That said, I would be interested in your answers as I would like to determine myself whether Mr. Weisfeld is accurate in his claim.
I don't really understand the real theory behind turntable stands. My Lead Balloon is heavy, has spikes, lead bars and all. But if I kick it, the tonearm would still skip.I don't have a wall stand, but I imagine if you bump into the wall when you are drunk, the wall stand would still wobble a bit.So other than looking nice, and something to set your turntable on, other claims of the turntable stands function can be ignored.
How so?
I think that most people don't take any measurements to determine whether or not they need better or different support for their TT. This usually comes up when someone is having a problem, like footfalls making your cart jump or acoustic feedback. Of course there are some, who just want the best possible playback. I'm confident that what I said previously about wall mounts (stud mounted, rather than lag bolts) holds true for everyone with wood floors, and most with concrete. Wood floors act like a spring and anyone with a suspended deck on top of a rack and with wood floors will experience problems. Non suspended decks are improved too. It seems to work best if the shelf is not bolted down on top of the brackets. It was explained to me, that for some reason the wall is not exposed to the physical vibrations the floor is, both from people moving about, and acoustic vibrations like bass. The vertical mounting of the brackets is supposed to dissipate energy better? Not bolting down the shelf is supposed to decouple the shelf from the brackets.Not sure if all that makes sense. What I am sure of, after yrs of living with wood floors in various places, is that wall mounts really work. Because of the weight and stability of your deck, you might not experience the benefits that someone with a sprung deck would. neo
I can just tap on my rack and hear it through the speakers. Even w/ the new Isoblocks and maple platform.