Let’s try this one more time. Not “apes” but “spikes.”
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Like others have said, what’s under your wood floor is important. The idea of isolation is to keep the vibrations in check. In my case, there’s plywood under my wood floors, so the vibrations just rumble through the floor. If you have concrete under your floors The Isoacoustics Gaia’s work great. I’m not familiar with Black Diamond Racing Disks, but if they’re really hard and you don’t have carpet and pad, they should help with your apes. 😉 |
Thanks, curousjim. I have hardwood floors. I don’t know what’s under it, probably plywood. It’s an upstairs room in a typical late ‘80s house. The discs are very hard metal. I don’t have carpet or padding in the room. So, do you think I’m ok? Should I consider more isolation under the rack? What else should I try, if anything?
Thanks, again |
Decoupling reduces vibration which lowers coloration. I decouple all my equipment which allows mechanical energy to turn into thermal energy. I started with my subs and heard the biggest difference. Still very present but tighter less boomy/extended. I use AV Roomservice and love them. Disclaimer all setups are different. https://avroomservice.com/evp-2/
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- 56 posts total

