Vibrapods and Speakers


After reading a Soundstage article couple years ago by Greg
Weaver I have been experimenting using vibrapods to decouple
speaker from stand/floor. In the original article Greg was amazed at the improvement in sound of his Von Schweikert speakers when he replaced the cones between the bass cabinet
and mid/high cabinet with vibrapods. I am very impressed using vibrapods on monitor speakers between stand and speaker to decouple speaker. Very noticeable increase in bass extension, more 3D sounding, and richer more natural sound. I will not go back to rigid coupled speaker/stand.
I am now experimenting using large vibrapods for floor standing speakers between speaker/floor. At first you will reject this out of hand because we have been told over and over that speakers should be cone/spike mounted, but I am not so sure. Any other members tried this approach?
128x128megasam

Showing 1 response by rcprince

Doug and Redkiwi, it think it was my speaker system that was referred to in the TAS article, if it was Anna Logg's article. I've been using Vibrapods, with some success, under the 180 pound woofer/subwoofer parts of my speaker system, and I've been pleased in that they have made the bass region of my system a little more articulate. Poor things are probably squished, although we did use a lot of them. The main reason I use them instead of spikes, other than to avoid wrecking a nice hardwood floor, is that my living/listening room is a suspended floor, over a 10 foot deep basement. I found spikes made my floor something of a sounding board; the vibrapods have been helpful in decoupling the speakers from the floor. Cheaper than putting additional supports and a beam under the speakers in the basement. If I had a concrete or other non-suspended floor, I would probably use cones of some sort.