Moderator: dante
egay wrote:TP,
I suppose proper room treatment can solve the problem to some extent but experiment first with placements as I note you still have some more room to play around.
Your objective is either to protect your TT from vibrations caused by your powerful subs or to completely move the TT from "harm's way". I've seen audiophiles move their TTs 20 feet away from their powerful speakers and that works (of course you need to have good interconnects to do that, else you'd be facing another problem - possible ground loops & hums).
Just take it one-step at a time & enjoy
.e.
m_shoe_maker wrote:Oh, if you go the wall mount rack route, just make sure that you mount the rack on a concrete wall. If its just mounted on a wall which is made of wood or plywood, that would be worse. Also, don't use those plastic thingies (forgot what its called) that you put on the drilled hole in the whole. Use the heavy duty metal ones so the rack will be able to hold heavy loads.
m_shoe_maker wrote:Target ba yan, hyper?
hypertriode wrote:m_shoe_maker wrote:Target ba yan, hyper?
it's REGA brother!
hypertriode wrote:m_shoe_maker wrote:Target ba yan, hyper?
it's REGA brother!
TAS wrote:an unsolicited advice especially to those who is planning to build a tt rack or platform....
a very important factor is how you tight you can make the joint...if possible make it force fit as you can as well. it will spell a big difference in resonance control. let me invite you to make a comparison between a tightly made rack (china made and bought in LIS ) and a regular one. hear the difference.
@endrik...wag ka na magexperiment...mas pogi un samin upgrade na
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