Best products for baffle material s ?


Looking for the "best" combination of materials. Building new boxes for my B&W CM1 bookshelfs as I can feel vibration on the baffle and sides, with classical music, quartet, at even very modest volume. These are very small 2 ways - so I can afford to go "all-out" on the boxes. High mass, inert, shaped baffle to minimize diffraction, interior design to break up waves. I'm considering only products that can be "woodworked". More detail later. Thanks.
ptss
Hello S7horton. I've been on hold with this (I think my massive "myocardial infarction" had something to do with that :-) ).
Ready to get back to it now. Looking to go all out for the construction of these little cabinets. I'm considering all aspects of interior cabinet design-to kill standing waves & resonance. I'll be in touch thanks.
Jonnk. My first idea was to respond "fribbett" as Johnny English said. However, I thought I'd better look up CHOBHAM --and WOW -- what a revelation. I am looking into it. Do you have some available and the blades I,d need to cut it??? ;-)) Where the heck did your knowledge come from? I,d bet not one in a million knows what you,ve described..
I'm going to research specs on materials- Chouhan , ceramic, aluminum,steel plate, exotic ironwoods, granite , artificial granite and other new countertop materials, maple, South American cherry woods for the hardness,density and vibration attenuation properties. Will report my findings. Any other materials I should consider? How is the energy disappated with all metal Magico or similar systems? I'm inclined towards Rockports multi-material designs as intellectually appealing and fully expect some combination to be the best bet. Wilson was using lead pads within their walls for mass and damping qualities. Cost and workability factors will be interesting.