Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello,
Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. But then there are those Auralex Mopads. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 08:35:16 -0800 (PST), genericaudioperson
wrote: Hello, Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. But then there are those Auralex Mopads. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" Neither makes any difference to the sound. The purpose of the spikes is to allow the speaker to stand on carpet without wrecking it. The purpose of the Monopads is to part the ignorant from his money. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. But then there are those Auralex Mopads. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" Absolutely. The various "solutions" beloved of audiophools are often self-contradictory. |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
genericaudioperson wrote:
Auralex Mopads. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" They keep the speaker cabinets from turning the shelf that you put them on into a secondary radiator. Then there's the Primacoustic Recoil Stabilizers, a heavy metal slab with a pad under it that you set your speakers on. This is the one that perfectly sensible people say really improves the sound. It works (simplistic explanation warning!) by adding mass to the speaker cabinet so it won't act as a secondary radiator. They demonstrate it by comparing a speaker on a Recoil Stabilizer with one on a piece of foam like a MoPad. When I was talking with a Primacoustic rep at a NAMM show and told him that I had my monitors on a stack of concrete blocks, he said "Well, you don't need these." Spikes couple the energy from the floppy speaker cabinet to the floor, which is exactly what you don't want to do. -- If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 14:20:24 -0500, Mike Rivers wrote
(in article ): genericaudioperson wrote: Auralex Mopads. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" They keep the speaker cabinets from turning the shelf that you put them on into a secondary radiator. Then there's the Primacoustic Recoil Stabilizers, a heavy metal slab with a pad under it that you set your speakers on. This is the one that perfectly sensible people say really improves the sound. It works (simplistic explanation warning!) by adding mass to the speaker cabinet so it won't act as a secondary radiator. They demonstrate it by comparing a speaker on a Recoil Stabilizer with one on a piece of foam like a MoPad. When I was talking with a Primacoustic rep at a NAMM show and told him that I had my monitors on a stack of concrete blocks, he said "Well, you don't need these." Spikes couple the energy from the floppy speaker cabinet to the floor, which is exactly what you don't want to do. In the old days, at radio stations, some of the turntable bases were filled with a couple of cubic feet of sand. They were a bitch to move..which was the point, as regards the cartridge and stylus. Regards, Ty Ford --Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWaPRHMGhGA |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits
of speaker spikes. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
William Sommerwerck wrote:
I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits of speaker spikes. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. Yes, but it would seem that there are many better ways to do it than to use spikes. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"William Sommerwerck" wrote in
message I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits of speaker spikes. They are calculably and measurably so trivial that it is hard to get up much enthusiasm for a listening test. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. If you do the math, the motion is trivial. BTW, cones really work! ;-) It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. When what you're coupling is trivial, whatever you do with that trivial something, makes no significant difference. |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Scott Dorsey" wrote ...
William Sommerwerck wrote: I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits of speaker spikes. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. Yes, but it would seem that there are many better ways to do it than to use spikes. Maybe their room has shag carpeting from the 1970s :-) The depth of the shag (where it wasn't matted down) may have made it acoustically effective maybe even down into the upper-mid-range! :-)) |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are
thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. Yes, but it would seem that there are many better ways to do it than to use spikes. Perhaps. Some people see spikes as a form of coupling, while others feel they provide de-coupling. Confusing. |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide
a partial "sink" for these vibrations. When what you're coupling is trivial, whatever you do with that trivial something, makes no significant difference. Probably. However, the issue of directly damping the cabinet's surfaces is something else. I'm not in the mood to discuss it right now. |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Richard Crowley" wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote ... William Sommerwerck wrote: I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits of speaker spikes. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. If you decouple the drivers, the air still vibrates inside causing motions on all surfaces. It would seem spikes would have the most effect on vertical vibrations. Each cabinet will have different vibrations. The best have little vibration. A cement floor would seem best. A flimsy woofen floor is going to move or vibrate the most. To put a spike of a speaker on a cenent floor, you want a spike that can give a little. Regardless of spikes, the sound in the room is going to vibrate the floor anyway. I'm sure there have been recorded tests, and I know for sure tests are done on cabinets alone to see what frequencies are resonating in the cabinet. Spikes may transfer these resonances but will have little effect on reducing them, unless they are canceled with another vibration source 180 degrees out of phase. greg Yes, but it would seem that there are many better ways to do it than to use spikes. Maybe their room has shag carpeting from the 1970s :-) The depth of the shag (where it wasn't matted down) may have made it acoustically effective maybe even down into the upper-mid-range! :-)) |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ty Ford wrote:
In the old days, at radio stations, some of the turntable bases were filled with a couple of cubic feet of sand. So were the walls of speaker enclosures. It's still probably better than 3/4" MDF but a lot heavier (good) and messier (bad) if you have termites. G -- If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "GregS" wrote in message ... In article , "Richard Crowley" wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote ... William Sommerwerck wrote: I've never seen any systematic studies of the audible or measurable benefits of speaker spikes. But they're not inherently stupid or useless. Unless the drivers are thoroughly decoupled from the cabinet, they make the cabinet move. It couldn't hurt to couple the cabinet to the floor, to provide a partial "sink" for these vibrations. If you decouple the drivers, the air still vibrates inside causing motions on all surfaces. It would seem spikes would have the most effect on vertical vibrations. Each cabinet will have different vibrations. The best have little vibration. A cement floor would seem best. A flimsy woofen floor is going to move or vibrate the most. To put a spike of a speaker on a cenent floor, you want a spike that can give a little. Regardless of spikes, the sound in the room is going to vibrate the floor anyway. I'm sure there have been recorded tests, and I know for sure tests are done on cabinets alone to see what frequencies are resonating in the cabinet. Spikes may transfer these resonances but will have little effect on reducing them, unless they are canceled with another vibration source 180 degrees out of phase. greg Yes, but it would seem that there are many better ways to do it than to use spikes. Maybe their room has shag carpeting from the 1970s :-) The depth of the shag (where it wasn't matted down) may have made it acoustically effective maybe even down into the upper-mid-range! :-)) My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? I don't know how complete this diode principle was meant to be, in terms of allowing one way transmission of kinetic energy only ? Wouldn't that depend on a gradation of absorptive materials on the downwards path so that 'reflections' of energy wouldn't travel back up the cone again ...? So if the cone point terminated in a full sandbox, for example, that would presumably act as an energy-sink. Dunno, that's my shaky (ha !) understanding of the "theory" anyway. RT |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? I don't know how complete this diode principle was meant to be, in terms of allowing one way transmission of kinetic energy only ? Wouldn't that depend on a gradation of absorptive materials on the downwards path so that 'reflections' of energy wouldn't travel back up the cone again ...? So if the cone point terminated in a full sandbox, for example, that would presumably act as an energy-sink. Dunno, that's my shaky (ha !) understanding of the "theory" anyway. RT I studied transmission lines from an electrical engineering standpoint a few years ago and I expect this represents the mechanical equivalent. It should be possible to minimize vibration reflections at the termination via impedance matching (where impedance in this case is a complex value based on mass, spring, damping). The diode analogy sounds iffy. The direction of elecron flow can be controlled using charges but a vibration carries no polarity. I don't believe an atom of matter has any means with which to determine whether a vibration came from direction x or direction -x. It would have to communicate with adjacent members to determine the direction of propogation, and then somehow it would have to absorb that energy or transmit it depending on the case. That doesn't sound like a natural property of matter. |
#16
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "David Grant" wrote:
My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? I don't know how complete this diode principle was meant to be, in terms of allowing one way transmission of kinetic energy only ? Wouldn't that depend on a gradation of absorptive materials on the downwards path so that 'reflections' of energy wouldn't travel back up the cone again ...? So if the cone point terminated in a full sandbox, for example, that would presumably act as an energy-sink. Dunno, that's my shaky (ha !) understanding of the "theory" anyway. RT I studied transmission lines from an electrical engineering standpoint a few years ago and I expect this represents the mechanical equivalent. It should be possible to minimize vibration reflections at the termination via impedance matching (where impedance in this case is a complex value based on mass, spring, damping). The diode analogy sounds iffy. The direction of elecron flow can be controlled using charges but a vibration carries no polarity. I don't believe an atom of matter has any means with which to determine whether a vibration came from direction x or direction -x. It would have to communicate with adjacent members to determine the direction of propogation, and then somehow it would have to absorb that energy or transmit it depending on the case. That doesn't sound like a natural property of matter. I suspect someone looked at the spikes one day and made a conclusion for no good reason. The spikes does go through carpeting and touch the floor, which for no other reason keep the speaker from rocking back and forth on the rug. I think I have also seen spikes which look more like nails. I would rather have the speaker on the rug, but the spikes look pretty both on the rug and on a wooden floor, except when you try to slide them. greg |
#17
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Ray Thomas" wrote in message
My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? That crashing sound you hear in the background is several laws of physics breaking. ;-) It is possible to make the mechanical equivalent of a diode, but it won't be a simple cone of metal. If you actually had one, a mechanical diode won't do what was described above. However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Speaker cones really work! Everything else works not so well. |
#18
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 9, 10:11*am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Ray Thomas" wrote in message My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Does that mean building speaker cabinets of heavier materials is pointless? |
#19
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , thepaulthomas wrote:
On Dec 9, 10:11=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Ray Thomas" wrote in message My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Does that mean building speaker cabinets of heavier materials is pointless? Not at all. Thats why they don't vibrate much. Even if you meagerly try to build something that you think might work, you still have to be carefull. By using proper damping and bracing, you can get away with poorer materials. I once built a small bass box for the truck. For some strange reason it vibrated like hell. I also has a power amp mounted on the side. Several components broke loose and I had to solder them back onto the board. It was a lesson learned. greg |
#20
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"thepaulthomas"
wrote in message On Dec 9, 10:11 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Ray Thomas" wrote in message My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Does that mean building speaker cabinets of heavier materials is pointless? No, but its all a matter of diminishing returns. Also, if you want a stiff cabinet, after a certain point, additional wood is better allocated to internal bracing. |
#21
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 9, 1:35*pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"thepaulthomas" wrote in On Dec 9, 10:11 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Ray Thomas" wrote in message My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Does that mean building speaker cabinets of heavier materials is pointless? No, but its all a matter of diminishing returns. Also, if you want a stiff cabinet, after a certain point, additional wood is better allocated to internal bracing. OK, gotcha. Thanks, Arny. Now what about things like concrete cabinets? I have a small pair of Rauna speakers that I like and they are made of concrete. Even though they are "bookshelf" size speakers they weigh about 45 pounds each. Would you consider that type of construction to be way beyond the point of diminishing returns or would the significantly heavier concrete walls just be similar in effect to the extra bracing you mentioned? |
#22
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
thepaulthomas wrote:
OK, gotcha. Thanks, Arny. Now what about things like concrete cabinets? I have a small pair of Rauna speakers that I like and they are made of concrete. Even though they are "bookshelf" size speakers they weigh about 45 pounds each. Would you consider that type of construction to be way beyond the point of diminishing returns or would the significantly heavier concrete walls just be similar in effect to the extra bracing you mentioned? That depends if you have to pay the shipping cost on them, and if you have to carry them around a lot. The holy grail, of course, is a lightweight cabinet that is nonresonant and can stand being dropped repeatedly. We don't have this, but the carbon composites get better every year. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#23
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 9, 1:50*pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
thepaulthomas wrote: OK, gotcha. Thanks, Arny. Now what about things like concrete cabinets? I have a small pair of Rauna speakers that I like and they are made of concrete. Even though they are "bookshelf" size speakers they weigh about 45 pounds each. Would you consider that type of construction to be way beyond the point of diminishing returns or would the significantly heavier concrete walls just be similar in effect to the extra bracing you mentioned? That depends if you have to pay the shipping cost on them, and if you have to carry them around a lot. The holy grail, of course, is a lightweight cabinet that is nonresonant and can stand being dropped repeatedly. *We don't have this, but the carbon composites get better every year. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. *C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." I bought the Rauna's used for $50 on eBay and paid another $50 for shipping so I really can't complain. However, the original owner that had them shipped from Sweden must have had one hell of a freight bill. ;-) |
#24
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "GregS" wrote in message ... In article , "David Grant" wrote: My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? I don't know how complete this diode principle was meant to be, in terms of allowing one way transmission of kinetic energy only ? Wouldn't that depend on a gradation of absorptive materials on the downwards path so that 'reflections' of energy wouldn't travel back up the cone again ...? So if the cone point terminated in a full sandbox, for example, that would presumably act as an energy-sink. Dunno, that's my shaky (ha !) understanding of the "theory" anyway. RT I studied transmission lines from an electrical engineering standpoint a few years ago and I expect this represents the mechanical equivalent. It should be possible to minimize vibration reflections at the termination via impedance matching (where impedance in this case is a complex value based on mass, spring, damping). The diode analogy sounds iffy. The direction of elecron flow can be controlled using charges but a vibration carries no polarity. I don't believe an atom of matter has any means with which to determine whether a vibration came from direction x or direction -x. It would have to communicate with adjacent members to determine the direction of propogation, and then somehow it would have to absorb that energy or transmit it depending on the case. That doesn't sound like a natural property of matter. I suspect someone looked at the spikes one day and made a conclusion for no good reason. The spikes does go through carpeting and touch the floor, which for no other reason keep the speaker from rocking back and forth on the rug. I think I have also seen spikes which look more like nails. I would rather have the speaker on the rug, but the spikes look pretty both on the rug and on a wooden floor, except when you try to slide them. greg You are obviously far too pragmatic and sensible about resonance physics, so let me provoke a little controversy by introducing you to the black arts of Shun Mook, which have been around for many years now. Now let's see...these should stir the pot sufficiently, at least for the entree course ;-) http://www.shunmook.com/text1.htm http://www.shunmook.com/text2.htm and for comprehensive overview http://www.stereophile.com/features/69/ (10+ pages of followup and reader's replies too !) Ray |
#25
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 7, 11:35*am, genericaudioperson
wrote: Hello, Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. * But then there are those Auralex Mopads. *Those would do the opposite I would think. *Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? *These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" Dear Generic... The spikes are from Hifi. The science is iffy. Perhaps they stabilize the loading of the speaker stand. The only advantage I can think of is to connect the bass to the floor in a point loaded fashion. The advantage of de-coupling speakers from a work station is real. OTOH, the foam isolation units don't work as well as a free standing, massive stand like cinder blocks. I used to believe as several have stated here that there could be no significant advantage to stand mounting over shelf mounting. I was wrong! The issue was irrefutably demonstrated to me while showing a high end NY jazz producer the Earthworks speakers. On stands the bass image was beautiful. As soon as the speakers were put on a table or shelf the bass image went away completely. The best explanation (rationalization)II could come up with was that A) the entire workstation becomes a bass radiator and B) that the bass information from the two speakers 'talks' to each other through the hard physical medium of the wood like substance and the differences are hidden. I understand that many people believe bass imaging is stupid or perhaps ill-conceived. I have heard all sorts of explanations why bass image can not possibly be perceived. Anyone want to argue that subject? Best regards, Eric Blackmer |
#26
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Eric B wrote:
Dear Generic... The spikes are from Hifi. The science is iffy. Perhaps they stabilize the loading of the speaker stand. The only advantage I can think of is to connect the bass to the floor in a point loaded fashion. I think this is true. I think also that they don't do anything that isn't better done by adding mass. And they tear up your floors. The advantage of de-coupling speakers from a work station is real. OTOH, the foam isolation units don't work as well as a free standing, massive stand like cinder blocks. Mass is always your friend. I used to believe as several have stated here that there could be no significant advantage to stand mounting over shelf mounting. I was wrong! The issue was irrefutably demonstrated to me while showing a high end NY jazz producer the Earthworks speakers. On stands the bass image was beautiful. As soon as the speakers were put on a table or shelf the bass image went away completely. The best explanation (rationalization)II could come up with was that A) the entire workstation becomes a bass radiator and B) that the bass information from the two speakers 'talks' to each other through the hard physical medium of the wood like substance and the differences are hidden. The low end really adds a lot to the perception of the stereo image and a lot of things that people notice as changing the image often are really the result in changes in bass tonality. But, if you want a really bad example, take those same speakers and hang them from the ceiling with ropes of chains, as is STILL commonly done in broadcast studios. The low end is totally screwed up, even more than on the table. I understand that many people believe bass imaging is stupid or perhaps ill-conceived. I have heard all sorts of explanations why bass image can not possibly be perceived. The problem is that people misinterpret the science. If you look at the studies, there is good proof that actual imaging does not exist for anything below about 20 Hz. This means that a second order crossover into a mono subwoofer has to be located at 10 Hz to make sure there isn't substantial energy above 20 Hz being made mono... which kind of defeats most subwoofers completely. People handwave this and say "there's no bass imaging" when they are talking about stuff in the 100 Hz range several octaves up. Bass imaging comes from arrival time differences at the ear, and if you think about the mechanism, you can see that at 20 Hz there is a pretty small fraction of a wavelength between the two ears. But yet, there's still some audible difference possible. All of this is confounded by my earlier point that tonal changes in the low end change perceived imaging. Anyone want to argue that subject? There's too much stuff going on to argue either way without knowing the real circumstances of the playback system. That's why instead I am going to go listen to another Jaco Pastorius record. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#27
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mass is always your friend.
Tell Oprah that. |
#28
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Eric B" wrote in message
On Dec 7, 11:35 am, genericaudioperson wrote: Hello, Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. Never had much problem with my speakers moving when I put them on rubber-tipped feet. But then there are those Auralex Mopads. Well, they reposition and reorient your speakers, if the PR is any guide. Those would do the opposite I would think. Wouldn't those pads make the speakers fly back and forth? These seem to be contradictory solutions to "tighten up the bass" If you want to tighten up the bass, check out this web site: http://www.realtraps.com/ The spikes are from Hifi. The science is iffy. Perhaps they stabilize the loading of the speaker stand. The only advantage I can think of is to connect the bass to the floor in a point loaded fashion. Why would point loading be advantageous? The advantage of de-coupling speakers from a work station is real. Really? OTOH, the foam isolation units don't work as well as a free standing, massive stand like cinder blocks. You're comparing apples and radishes. Yes both are red on the outside and white on the inside, but... ;-) Speakers are like houses and businesses, its all about location,, and location. Well, location and orientation. If you want to compare foam isolation units and free-standing stands, hold location and orientation constant while you add and remove the foam blocks. Otherwise, all you're doing is proving me right about the importance of location and orientation. I used to believe as several have stated here that there could be no significant advantage to stand mounting over shelf mounting. Ever compare a stand and a shelf while holding location and orientation the same? But that doesn't hold location constant because the shelf places the speaker on a long plane, or even between two long planes that may be very significant acoustically. I was wrong! Hold that thought! ;-) The issue was irrefutably demonstrated to me while showing a high end NY jazz producer the Earthworks speakers. On stands the bass image was beautiful. As soon as the speakers were put on a table or shelf the bass image went away completely. Yes, but location and orientation were different. Furthermore, if you put a speaker on a table, you're putting it on top of a planar surface that is large enough to change the acoustics around the speaker. But I doubt that you did this while holding location and orientation constant. So, all you did is prove me right about the importance of location and orientation. This is yet another example of Occam's razor. People move speaker from standing on spikes on the floor to a position on a shelf about ear height. Then they attribute the obvious difference in sound quality to the spikes? The best explanation (rationalization)II could come up with was that A) the entire workstation becomes a bass radiator and B) that the bass information from the two speakers 'talks' to each other through the hard physical medium of the wood like substance and the differences are hidden. Or, the difference is location, orientation, and acoustical (not mechanical) environment. I understand that many people believe bass imaging is stupid or perhaps ill-conceived. It's real, especially with small speakers. I have heard all sorts of explanations why bass image can not possibly be perceived. Well, part of that depends on what you call bass. I call bass anything below 80 Hz. If you arrange your speakers correctly, then there will be minimum perceptible directionality, but there may indeed be some. If you do what most people do, and that is arrange the speakers where there is some space available without changing the layout of the room, then the results are anything from soup to nuts. Anyone want to argue that subject? At this point, I think I been there and done that! ;-) |
#29
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"William Sommerwerck" wrote in
message Mass is always your friend. Tell Oprah that. Baby got back! ;-) |
#30
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Almost 30 years ago, Jon Dahlquist accidentally discovered that painting a
speaker cabinet with 3M "fuzzy" paint (I forget the trade name) significantly improved the sound, apparently because it dampened the surface, preventing it from becoming a secondary radiator. I heard a demo of this, and was surprised. |
#31
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Eric B" wrote in message On Dec 7, 11:35 am, genericaudioperson wrote: Hello, Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. Never had much problem with my speakers moving when I put them on rubber-tipped feet. I would imagine speakers could move on spikes. I have moved speakers before bare wood against floor. I think rubber is a perfectly good material. Sorbothane is probably better. greg |
#32
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "William Sommerwerck" wrote:
Almost 30 years ago, Jon Dahlquist accidentally discovered that painting a speaker cabinet with 3M "fuzzy" paint (I forget the trade name) significantly improved the sound, apparently because it dampened the surface, preventing it from becoming a secondary radiator. I heard a demo of this, and was surprised. Defraction or anti-defraction rings will change the sound as well as doing the entire surface. I have treated a number of speakers with felt like materials. It might not be a good thing on all speakers as they are voiced as they are, but when building speakers or modifying its a very nice thing to do. It can lift some of the cabinet edge smearing. greg |
#33
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#34
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 10, 11:29*am, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote: Almost 30 years ago, Jon Dahlquist accidentally discovered that painting a speaker cabinet with 3M "fuzzy" paint (I forget the trade name) significantly improved the sound, apparently because it dampened the surface, preventing it from becoming a secondary radiator. I heard a demo of this, and was surprised. William, There is a bizarre effect that most people are unaware of. High frequencies travel along a surface or boundary differently than they move through the air. In effect the sound travels along the surface of the box and where ever a corner, screw or surface deformity exists the sound re-radiates making a more complex sound field. Since the ideal speaker is a singular point source anything you can do to reduce this re-radiation will help clarify the imaging. Rounded edges on a speaker box also helps. The notion of a single point source being ideal may also help explain the importance of decoupling your speakers from the workstation. Someone pointed out on this thread the location, location, location 'truism' This may be true, but primarily it is due to the fact that most speakers are awful and interact with the room poorly. In other words, with most speakers as you move the speaker in relation to the walls the room's acoustical issues are stimulated variously by the problems of the speaker. If the rooms and the speakers weren't so awful the location, location, location axiom wouldn't be true. Take it all the way out of the room... think of it in free space. location only matters as it relates to the relationship between you and the speakers. And you can move. The degree to which the location model is true relates entirely to the flaws of listening through boxes inside of boxes. And those can to some extent be fixed. Do you need an acoustician? http://www.blackmersound.com. Sorry, Eric Blackmer |
#35
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Eric B" wrote in message
... On Dec 10, 11:29 am, "William Sommerwerck" wrote: Almost 30 years ago, Jon Dahlquist accidentally discovered that painting a speaker cabinet with 3M "fuzzy" paint (I forget the trade name) significantly improved the sound, apparently because it dampened the surface, preventing it from becoming a secondary radiator. I heard a demo of this, and was surprised. William, There is a bizarre effect that most people are unaware of. High frequencies travel along a surface or boundary differently than they move through the air. In effect the sound travels along the surface of the box and whereever a corner, screw or surface deformity exists the sound re-radiates making a more complex sound field. Since the ideal speaker is a singular point source or a true line source ahem anything you can do to reduce this re-radiation will help clarify the imaging. Rounded edges on a speaker box also helps. The biggest part of the improvement was in imaging. The effect was of a magnitude and nature that, if I try to describe it, Arny will be doubled up on the floor in derisive laughter. So I won't. Someone pointed out on this thread the location, location, location 'truism' This may be true, but primarily it is due to the fact that most speakers are awful... QUADs, M-Ls, Apogees, etc? and interact with the room poorly. In other words, with most speakers as you move the speaker in relation to the walls the room's acoustical issues are stimulated variously by the problems of the speaker. Even if you had a perfect point source, or a perfect line source, the room's acoustics would still be stimulated, and likely in "bad" ways. If the rooms and the speakers weren't so awful the location, location, location axiom wouldn't be true. Not so. A good speaker will be degraded by a bad room, while a bad speaker in a good room won't be worsened. Take it all the way out of the room... think of it in free space. location only matters as it relates to the relationship between you and the speakers. And you can move. The degree to which the location model is true relates entirely to the flaws of listening through boxes inside of boxes. And those can to some extent be fixed. Do you need an acoustician? http://www.blackmersound.com. Yes, but I don't have the money. Sorry, Eric Blackmer |
#36
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. How would you know, mr. No Experience? Oct, 2000 , TAS - What's Wrong With Speakers by R.E. Greene "But as soon as a speaker gets an input signal, it starts doing things it shouldn't and starts making noise, not just the music it should be making. Cones and surrounds flexing, mechanical structures vibrating, cabinets flexing in unpredicted and unpredictable ways, air flowing turbulently, electrostatic diaphragms vibrating chaotically on the scale of small areas even if they are moving regularly on a large scale, such sources of noise are everywhere." "How much noise are we talking about here? A lot, a whole lot by the standards of noise levels in electronics and recording systems. Speaker noise appears only 20 to 30 dB down from signal in some cases, and even the cleanest speakers I know do not get the noise down much more than 55 dB or so." |
#37
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Don Pearce" wrote Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. The purpose of the spikes is to allow the speaker to stand on carpet without wrecking it. Perpetuating USEnet myth, I see, go do your own homework. For maximum effectiveness spikes should not be run through any type of carpet interface (carpet/foam). If you have high quality carpet, spikes just won't penetrate the carpet/pad substrate. The tightly woven jute backing and under pad are the problem. The conical shape of spikes simply will not couple to the sub-floor... and I mean tightly. While it might appear (feel) to you that your spikes are firmly in they are still supported by the carper/pad. Sound pressure measurements and auditioning indicate only a poor improvement in fidelity if used in this way. |
#38
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 15:41:51 -0500, "Powell"
wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote Sharp spikes are often put on the bottom of speakers to keep them from moving when a loud bass note is hit. The purpose of the spikes is to allow the speaker to stand on carpet without wrecking it. Perpetuating USEnet myth, I see, go do your own homework. For maximum effectiveness spikes should not be run through any type of carpet interface (carpet/foam). If you have high quality carpet, spikes just won't penetrate the carpet/pad substrate. The tightly woven jute backing and under pad are the problem. The conical shape of spikes simply will not couple to the sub-floor... and I mean tightly. While it might appear (feel) to you that your spikes are firmly in they are still supported by the carper/pad. Sound pressure measurements and auditioning indicate only a poor improvement in fidelity if used in this way. Nonsense - you clearly have no experience in this area. The spikes do not penetrate initially, but within an hour or so they have worked their way through the jute backing and are making perfect contact with the floor beneath. Meanwhile the valuable pile remains intact. As for your gibbering about sound pressure measurements - please don't insult this group with such tripe. Everyone else on here clearly knows a great deal more than you. d |
#39
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ray Thomas wrote:
"GregS" wrote in message ... In article , "David Grant" wrote: My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? I don't know how complete this diode principle was meant to be, in terms of allowing one way transmission of kinetic energy only ? Wouldn't that depend on a gradation of absorptive materials on the downwards path so that 'reflections' of energy wouldn't travel back up the cone again ...? So if the cone point terminated in a full sandbox, for example, that would presumably act as an energy-sink. Dunno, that's my shaky (ha !) understanding of the "theory" anyway. RT I studied transmission lines from an electrical engineering standpoint a few years ago and I expect this represents the mechanical equivalent. It should be possible to minimize vibration reflections at the termination via impedance matching (where impedance in this case is a complex value based on mass, spring, damping). The diode analogy sounds iffy. The direction of elecron flow can be controlled using charges but a vibration carries no polarity. I don't believe an atom of matter has any means with which to determine whether a vibration came from direction x or direction -x. It would have to communicate with adjacent members to determine the direction of propogation, and then somehow it would have to absorb that energy or transmit it depending on the case. That doesn't sound like a natural property of matter. I suspect someone looked at the spikes one day and made a conclusion for no good reason. The spikes does go through carpeting and touch the floor, which for no other reason keep the speaker from rocking back and forth on the rug. I think I have also seen spikes which look more like nails. I would rather have the speaker on the rug, but the spikes look pretty both on the rug and on a wooden floor, except when you try to slide them. greg You are obviously far too pragmatic and sensible about resonance physics, so let me provoke a little controversy by introducing you to the black arts of Shun Mook, which have been around for many years now. Now let's see...these should stir the pot sufficiently, at least for the entree course ;-) http://www.shunmook.com/text1.htm http://www.shunmook.com/text2.htm and for comprehensive overview http://www.stereophile.com/features/69/ (10+ pages of followup and reader's replies too !) Ray The sort of thing one tries to avoid stepping on in the pasture. -Raf -- Misifus- Rafael Seibert Photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/rafiii home: http://www.rafandsioux.com |
#40
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
thepaulthomas wrote:
On Dec 9, 1:35 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "thepaulthomas" wrote in On Dec 9, 10:11 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Ray Thomas" wrote in message My understanding (of the sales pitch/marketing ?) of the function of cones or spikes was that they were supposed to act as a 'physical diode'..in other words to allow unwanted vibrations and micro-motion to transfer from the speaker cabinet into the thick end of the cone and then down through its point to a massy, inert body below it (floor, shelf, concrete slab etc) which would then absorb the vibes and in theory refuse to allow them to be reflected back up the spike/cone again ? However the biggest fallacy is the idea that there will be significant vibrations of the speaker cabinet. Does that mean building speaker cabinets of heavier materials is pointless? No, but its all a matter of diminishing returns. Also, if you want a stiff cabinet, after a certain point, additional wood is better allocated to internal bracing. OK, gotcha. Thanks, Arny. Now what about things like concrete cabinets? I have a small pair of Rauna speakers that I like and they are made of concrete. Even though they are "bookshelf" size speakers they weigh about 45 pounds each. Would you consider that type of construction to be way beyond the point of diminishing returns or would the significantly heavier concrete walls just be similar in effect to the extra bracing you mentioned? Seems to me that while the concrete cabinets may be beyond the point of diminishing returns with regard to cabinet weight, they may well represent a significant savings in the cost of production. -Raf -- Misifus- Rafael Seibert Photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/rafiii home: http://www.rafandsioux.com |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Speaker Stands: with or without spikes? | High End Audio | |||
Speaker Stands: with or without spikes? | Tech | |||
Decoupling screen grids from each other | Vacuum Tubes | |||
Speaker Spikes | Audio Opinions | |||
What is the effect of too small a decoupling cap? | Vacuum Tubes |