Does anyone use wood for vibration control?


What kind of wood have you found to be best?
bksherm
glubson, please try to keep up with the conversation. I’ve been talking about the electrical signal, not the final acoustic signal. I trust you don’t think the final acoustic signal is not dependent on what comes before, you know, the electrical signal in the power cord, in the electronics, in the transformer, in the fuse, in the interconnects, in the DAC, CD player or turntable, and speaker cables. I don’t think anyone can be that obtuse. Not even you. No offense.

Well, I was planning on doing a couple of tuning moves, but I really like this presentation and I’m going to take it in instead of changing it. Maybe when I put on the next recording if there is something I want to change I can describe what I did from this recording to that but for now I think I’m just going to groove on this more.

mg

Mapleshade makes some excellent products for audio. All Maple. I use them under all of my equipment.


Rollin
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Who is more obsessive compulsive, tweakers or Tuners? Let’s take maple platforms (boards) for example. You got your air dried maple from Mapleshade. You got your maple with grain running vertically and maple with grain running horizontally. There are varying thicknesses of maple, the thicker maple boards resisting bending forces better than thinner maple boards. There’s also the tricky issues of mounting the maple board and mounting the component on the maple or other material. So, what is the best way to mount the maple board and the component?

The best way to mount the maple board (or any material) and the component is extremely hard cones. The harder the cones the better the sound - fuller, more open, more natural. As it turns out materials like aluminum 2.75 and carbon fiber and brass 3.0 and hardwood are actually relatively soft, on the Mohs scale of Hardness, where diamond is a perfect 10. Lead is 1.75. An excellent choice for cone material would be hardened high carbon steel 7-8 (like my Machina Dynamica springs) or NASA grade ceramic 9.5, both of which are quite high on the Mohs scale of Hardness.

And we haven’t even talked about using springs with maple boards. The final frontier.