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BobT wrote:di ba pwedeng multiple answers?
Jon Agner wrote:BobT wrote:di ba pwedeng multiple answers?
may multiple TT syndrome din ata 'to
BobT wrote:Jon Agner wrote:BobT wrote:di ba pwedeng multiple answers?
may multiple TT syndrome din ata 'to
tumpak po, kaya meron sa cabinet, meron sa rack, at meron din sa sahig. hehehe...
Tube Pro wrote:Voted: On a sturdy rack coupled to the floor
just wondering when playing vinyl from a turntable and begin to increase the Bass control of the mixer from a flat setting, a low fequency sound develops gradually until it loops tremendously, especailly with the high music level. Considering I have a concrete tiled floor, the rack is a wooden 4-layered table, and a meter distance from the left 3-way 12" speaker, the LF oscillation reduces only when I raise up a bit the front side of the turntable.
Please help, what should i need to do? I even tried to place a foam below the vinyl player, but it didn't solve the problem.
I dont want raising the turntable everytime I play a loud bassy music.
Appreciate in advance any good suggestions.
m_shoe_maker wrote:Tube Pro wrote:Voted: On a sturdy rack coupled to the floor
just wondering when playing vinyl from a turntable and begin to increase the Bass control of the mixer from a flat setting, a low fequency sound develops gradually until it loops tremendously, especailly with the high music level. Considering I have a concrete tiled floor, the rack is a wooden 4-layered table, and a meter distance from the left 3-way 12" speaker, the LF oscillation reduces only when I raise up a bit the front side of the turntable.
Please help, what should i need to do? I even tried to place a foam below the vinyl player, but it didn't solve the problem.
I dont want raising the turntable everytime I play a loud bassy music.
Appreciate in advance any good suggestions.
Never raise or move your turntable when its playing music.
Is your wooden 4-layered table sturdy?
Experiment by moving your turntable farther form the speaker.
m_shoe_maker wrote:Voted na before.
Here is a picture of it.
See guys, your friendly neighborhood MSM can be helpful too.
m_shoe_maker wrote:My audio room is on the 2nd floor, and the floor is wood (no concrete underneath), so I had no choice but to go to the wall mount route.
Whatever TT I put on it, I don't have problems with vibrations and stuff. I have kicked the wall 1 feet away from the rack, and my TT did not have problems, no thuds or weird sounds were picked-up by the cartridge.
egay wrote:Remember: the cartridge is a MICROPHONE - whatever sound/vibration produced in your listening room will be picked-up by your cart & magnified... low frequency crawls and travels long distances.
Your rack is NOT sturdy enough so it vibrates like crazy. Either relocate your TT away from your speakers, or get a sturdier rack.
BTW, try relocating your TT in-between your speakers for that area would be one of the 'quietest' in our room.
Then again, I'm just guessing because I don't play loud, disco-like music in my room.
Ultimately, try to tame your bass.
Enjoy!
.e.
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