To Couple or Decouple?


I've recently purchased a pair of Acoustic Zen Crescendos. I now have them positioned in the room, and I am ready to add the spikes. The floor in my room is a suspended wood type. After researching whether or not to spike speakers or decouple them on a suspended wood floor, the majority seems to recommend not spiking them directly to the wood floor, but decoupling them. So here are my questions:
1). Do I couple or decouple?
2). Anyone use the Boston Audio Tuneblocks S under your spikes? How do you like them?
3). Any recommendations of other decoupling devices to use?
Thanks for you input!
louisl
They got to be heavy suckers; I have the Adagios which are almost 90 lbs each. Depending on the dimensions of the bottom footprint, you may want to take a look at the Mapleshade Internet store collection of decoupling wood bases. Unfinished wood is less money. Also, check out a stone yard where you could get a marble slab cut to the size of the footprint. A one inch thickness should be sufficient. Good Luck!!
SYMPOSIUM is the best sounding best stage,bass weight,imaging and depth if you want to go cheap with little improvement get wood,stone etc.
You need decoupling on that floor, and your Crescendos deserve Stillpoints Ultra 5s. Expensive but worth it.
Vibrapods (or things like them) are MUCH less expensive than what I consider to be over-machined accessory porn (!) stuff like Stillpoints, and they accomplish the same thing...turning vibration into heat or at least decoupling direct speaker vibration from a floor. I'm waiting for magnetic levitation pods for speakers...should cost as much as my car.
I second the Herbies gliders, if only to make moving/positioning the speakers very easy. Much disagreement about whether to couple/decouple. My experience is that unless you play at very high db's it might not matter. YMMV