Speaker isolation/damping

Author
Discussion

TEKNOPUG

Original Poster:

19,808 posts

220 months

Wednesday 5th July 2023
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What are people's preferred material/product for isolating speakers on a shelf or unit?

I don't want to use stands, something more discreet, like rubber feet or similar.

mondie

639 posts

157 months

Wednesday 5th July 2023
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Big blobs of Blutak are the go.

mikef

5,627 posts

266 months

Wednesday 5th July 2023
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EVA pads work for me https://amzn.eu/d/8tyQXx9

TEKNOPUG

Original Poster:

19,808 posts

220 months

Thursday 6th July 2023
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Can they be cut to size?

mac96

5,136 posts

158 months

Friday 7th July 2023
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Squash balls cut in half seem to be quite a frequent suggestion. Works for me but only for speakers on a desk top as they make taller stands vulnerable to being knocked over.

TEKNOPUG

Original Poster:

19,808 posts

220 months

Friday 7th July 2023
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I used to have them on stands but they proved to be less than child friendly hehe

So they are on a long sideboard unit, either side of the TV. I'm running a sub with the speakers cut at 80hz, so perhaps the benefit of decoupling them may be negligible?

mac96

5,136 posts

158 months

Saturday 8th July 2023
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I think the answer is too experiment
Does putting speakers on a pillow make any difference? If not, probably isolation by more expensive means won't either. Not suggesting pillows as long term solution!

I remember my Dad finding that a pair of dining chairs with padded seats made better stands for his particular speakers than the expensive ones he had bought!

OutInTheShed

11,463 posts

41 months

Saturday 8th July 2023
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Sometimes you want to fix the speaker to the mass of the thing it's sat on.
So the speaker can push the air better, it's got the furniture to push against.

Other times you want to isolate the speaker, to avoid it rattling the furniture.

Sometimes there may be more subtle things going on, you want some low frequency coupling for the speaker to react against, but isolate high frequencies to avoid impulses or something. One case in point, a speaker on a bookcase could make the glass doors ring.

Blu Tak is useful as it absorbs a lot of energy quickly, whereas foam rubber allows more movement and absorbs less energy.

Play around and find an answer you like.

mac96

5,136 posts

158 months

Saturday 8th July 2023
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
Sometimes you want to fix the speaker to the mass of the thing it's sat on.
So the speaker can push the air better, it's got the furniture to push against.

Other times you want to isolate the speaker, to avoid it rattling the furniture.

Sometimes there may be more subtle things going on, you want some low frequency coupling for the speaker to react against, but isolate high frequencies to avoid impulses or something. One case in point, a speaker on a bookcase could make the glass doors ring.

Blu Tak is useful as it absorbs a lot of energy quickly, whereas foam rubber allows more movement and absorbs less energy.

Play around and find an answer you like.
I agree with all that, but a word of warning about blutak. Left in place for a long time, it will pull veneer off the base of the speaker when speaker pulled off stand. As I discovered with substantial irritation !

craigjm

19,246 posts

215 months

Saturday 8th July 2023
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mac96 said:
OutInTheShed said:
Sometimes you want to fix the speaker to the mass of the thing it's sat on.
So the speaker can push the air better, it's got the furniture to push against.

Other times you want to isolate the speaker, to avoid it rattling the furniture.

Sometimes there may be more subtle things going on, you want some low frequency coupling for the speaker to react against, but isolate high frequencies to avoid impulses or something. One case in point, a speaker on a bookcase could make the glass doors ring.

Blu Tak is useful as it absorbs a lot of energy quickly, whereas foam rubber allows more movement and absorbs less energy.

Play around and find an answer you like.
I agree with all that, but a word of warning about blutak. Left in place for a long time, it will pull veneer off the base of the speaker when speaker pulled off stand. As I discovered with substantial irritation !
And of the furniture it’s tacked too

Dragster

49 posts

29 months

Sunday 9th July 2023
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Large, domed, ( thick ) self adhesive 'Bump On' feet are a good compromise between coupling and decoupling. The synthetic rubber ( elastomer ) is compliant and damps vibrations very well; on a couple of occasions I've used three in a triangle rather than one at each corner because the surface the speaker was on was not completely flat.

They cost buttons smile and work extremely well...........a couple of pounds buys enough for all your speakers with enough left over to fix cupboard doors, chopping boards etc etc thumbup

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Adhesive-Bumpers-Dampenin...

Zero Fuchs

2,378 posts

33 months

Sunday 9th July 2023
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If you have threaded inserts for spikes then perhaps something these:

https://amzn.eu/d/aQP0aLF

I bought some for a pair of floorstanders on my wooden floor but should work ok on a bookshelf.

Trouble is, all rubbers or similar tend to outgass and are oily so are a pain on furniture, unless they're slightly domed to reduce contact area.

911newbie

611 posts

275 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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I used some felt pads bought on amazon to isolate my turntable (sat on top of the amp and CD player) on my living room cabinet, from my speakers also sitting on the cabinet. They are sold for crafty type stuff and have a sticky glue on one side with peel off layer, which never got peeled off.
Worked well. Cost very little.

Most vibration dampers are lossy across the frequency range, i.e convert incoming vibrations into heat.
But nearly all will be way better at damping at some frequnecies compared to others.

So if you find felt pads don't do it for you, try the tennis balls, try the foam pads, try loads of things. Chances are one will solve your prblem.
There are some quiet expensive solutions sold to audiophiles, which I'm not sure are really that much better.

WhiskyDisco

1,004 posts

89 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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Any recommendations for stopping my subwoofer from moving about on a tiled floor?

darreni

4,204 posts

285 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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WhiskyDisco said:
Any recommendations for stopping my subwoofer from moving about on a tiled floor?
https://rel.net/blog/2018-08-08/how-to/solutions-for-hard-floors/