Anti-vibration balls for hifi racks


I'm considering purchase of NorStone Spider shelf modules to put my components on. The company sells expensive "calibrated" metal balls to add weight to the hollow tubular legs of the modules. Wouldn't buckshot work as well?

jrdavisphd

Lots of good ideas and helpful recommendations! Thank you. I think I could also order stainless steel ball bearings from Amazon. Preferrably without sand, bug eggs, or piranhas. I don't don't trust that Bezos fella, so maybe a fish tank store is the place to go.72 Carnivorous Piranha Stock Illustrations, Vectors & Clipart - Dreamstime

I'm confident Jean Nantius the individual who stole most to the ideas for Plinth Building from the Lenco Heaven Website, to generate the ideas to become a commercial entity producing plinths, was an advocate of SS Ball potted in a compound embedded into a TT's Plinth.    

I use a pro kitchen stainless steel table with six inch rubber wheels. It's mass is all I need. Plus I can move it for dusting. 

Silica (quartz) sand, as used in sandblasting, is what used to be recommended.

The only drawback is that the dust coming off of it is unhealthy - so fill items outside and wear a mask.

Once contained in a rack or stand it is no longer a health hazard.

If stored inside a lumber yard building it should already be dry (avoid sand stored outside on pallets).

Lead shot is difficult to dispose of properly, fortunately my auto mechanic accepted it for recycling.

 

DeKay