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Nice work on the speaks mang.

Thanks :)

Can I pick your physics knowledge about turntable stands? :P

With the damn springy floor that I've got in the apartment...going wall-mounted would be ideal if not for damaging the wall :(

Nice 'peekas :D

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Nice work on the speaks mang.

Thanks :)

Can I pick your physics knowledge about turntable stands? :P

With the damn springy floor that I've got in the apartment...going wall-mounted would be ideal if not for damaging the wall :(

Of course you can.

Nice work on the speaks mang.

Thanks :)

Can I pick your physics knowledge about turntable stands? :P

With the damn springy floor that I've got in the apartment...going wall-mounted would be ideal if not for damaging the wall :(

Of course you can.

OK, given my really less-than-perfect environment (3rd floor, carpeted floors, no wall mounting available), how would you suggest building a stand to best prevent outside vibrations from affecting the 'table?

I've seen roughly two camps on this, one seems to be using a very light stand that's spiked to the floor, the other involves just getting as much mass as possible and putting the turntable on top of that.

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Morning :D

Time to run downstairs and get some breakfast.

Nice work on the speaks mang.

Thanks :)

Can I pick your physics knowledge about turntable stands? :P

With the damn springy floor that I've got in the apartment...going wall-mounted would be ideal if not for damaging the wall :(

Of course you can.

OK, given my really less-than-perfect environment (3rd floor, carpeted floors, no wall mounting available), how would you suggest building a stand to best prevent outside vibrations from affecting the 'table?

I've seen roughly two camps on this, one seems to be using a very light stand that's spiked to the floor, the other involves just getting as much mass as possible and putting the turntable on top of that.

I'm no expert in any way but it seems to me the approaches are saying:

1. Remove mass to push the frequencies at which the stand resonates into a higher passband, or

2. Add mass to push the frequencies at which the stand resonates into a lower passband.

I would guess that adding mass is a better approach. The amplitude of the resonant frequencies is decreased as mass is added and the passband is pushed down (much like adding mass to a door panel or layers to an enclosure). It seems to me that a large, heavy stand would be much more effective.

But Sean might have some different ideas.

Remind me never ever go to New Hampshire...

Hilary? Seriously? :suicide-santa:

The second one looks almost DIY'able except the plexi cover.

That reminds me, I need to get out my heatstrip shortly and bend some plexi for some crossovers.

wait, you have a method of forming plexi?

What about using some sort of mechanism to dampen it?

I'm thinking more of something I can build out of the leftover ply, sand, lead shot, resin and other wood I have laying around here :D

The levitating stand will have to wait...:)

Going with void-free ply would have been a lot less of a headache.

I've got a few spots where apparently there's a void right underneath the veneer layer, so there's a little "dent" in the surface...grr...

What about using some sort of mechanism to dampen it?

I'm thinking more of something I can build out of the leftover ply, sand, lead shot, resin and other wood I have laying around here :D

The levitating stand will have to wait...:)

I dare you to wall mount it :P

That's just how I'm going to mount mine (well, as soon as I buy a TT :lol:)

Yeah, but you don't have a landlord that'll get pissed with holes in the drywall :D

Once again, my folks' place would rock for this, I'd just bolt a shelf right to one of the big vertical beams and I'd never have to worry about vibrations :D

Came across this thread...http://www.homediscussion.com/showthread.php?t=94831 Seems to have the same issue I do, I like the hypodermic needle idea, makes sense to fill up the void.

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