Can I Live With A Hardwood Floor?


Hi All,
I could certainly use some advice on this matter. I have Quad 2905 ESL's in my attic and my attic has hardwood floors. I recently moved into this residence never having experienced hardwood floors previously. My speakers are on cones and isolated with Herbie's titanium gliders. I've been able to position the speakers so that they are given enough room to operate effectively but those hardwood floors are brutal at times. My thought leads me to the only obvious solution, 12 feet by 12 feet carpeting. Are there more cost effective ways of approaching this?
Any advice is greatly appreciated. Thanks as always!
goofyfoot
if you have a line problem then go straight to an isolation transformer; buy used on ebay or somewhere else & you may need an electrician to wire it in

PS Audio will be glad to sell you one for 3x to 4x more and it will look nicer...
randy, won't an isolation transformer strip away some frequencies? I tried one many years ago and it didn't sound right. I remember that it was hospital grade.
I too have 2905’s. My floor is granite. A few thoughts.

Anything you can do to make the walls, floors, or ceiling a bit rough is helpful. I use a large Persian carpet on one wall, and 12" x 24" rectangular patterns of 1" wood trim on the ceiling.

Equally useful are non-parallel surfaces. You might be able to do something with your ceiling to make it non-parallel to the floor, like a peak in the middle.

Consider your floor; make sure it is as stable as possible. Re-inforcing may be costly, but it is something to consider.

I would absolutely forget about trying to tweek the Quads with power stuff. They use so little current, and anyway the RC time constant is so large, that it can’t make any difference. Further, I tested this theory with high class isolation transformers, and they made no difference whatsoever to the Quads. Big difference to amps, pre, and phono, but nothing to the Quads. Save your money for a better source, or better electronics, or a decent Burgundy.

If you want to improve the Quads, you will have to replace the step-up transformers or replace components in the signal path, like that ugly cap and resistor. Not recommended for a DIY, though - Quads can kill you in two ways. Get a tech to do it. Beware!

Good luck.

If you seriously want to improve the Quads, find a good tech who is experienced with high voltage equipment. Get him to install better step-ups (I use Plitron , based on a Vanderveen design), and replace the ugly resistor at the input of the circuit board. Don't do it yourself.

But you can get more bang for the buck in electronics, or isolating your electronics, or with an ultrasonic record cleaner. Experience talking.

Thanks Terry. Room treatments sound practical but the Richard Gray does also. I have a great amp, ASR Emitter II Exclusive and that runs on a battery so nothing to worry about there. 
My stereo certainly sounds good at night as to be expected. I just finished listening and can say that even having laid down blankets made a significant improvement. Any advice on wall panels?