What to rest speakers on?

Author
Discussion

ChevronB19

Original Poster:

5,783 posts

163 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
Due to a house remodel, I’m moving my hifi into the main living room, which has an LVT floor.

Previous set up was spiked (and weighted) speaker stands ‘embedded’ into a thick parquet floor.

Any tips? Press the spikes into the floor once I’ve decided on correct positioning, rest spiked stands on chopping boards, take spikes off? I’m clueless about this…

rjfp1962

7,732 posts

73 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
I'd carefully decide where you want to position them, retain the weight in the stands and keep the spikes direct to the floor. Adjust spikes as required for complete stabilty.

STiG911

1,210 posts

167 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
As above, but I'd recommend using penny coins or similar between the spikes and the floor to protect the flooring.

theboss

6,913 posts

219 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
You can get purpose made little feet that protect the floor. There's no way I'd let spikes sink into a wooden floor unless its just floorboards and you couldn't care less.

I've always had a set of these because thats what my Linn dealer would have handed over the counter 20+ years ago when Amazon wasn't a thing, but its easy to find equivalents for a fraction of the cost.

If nothing else to hand use 2p's as mentioned.

https://www.audioaffair.co.uk/linn-skeet-floor-pro...

HustleRussell

24,701 posts

160 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
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I recently became aware of speaker 'spike shoes' which exist for this purpose. Some feature a vibration isolating design. Opinions are split on whether you want your speakers isolated from the floor or not!

HustleRussell

24,701 posts

160 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
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clockworks

5,364 posts

145 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
I used 10p coins, drilled about a third of the way through so that the spike points were securely located, and stuck to the flooring with a blob of white "blutack".

ChevronB19

Original Poster:

5,783 posts

163 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for the tips folks!

STiG911

1,210 posts

167 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
quotequote all
clockworks said:
I used 10p coins, drilled about a third of the way through so that the spike points were securely located, and stuck to the flooring with a blob of white "blutack".
Someone's flush! laugh

Digger

14,678 posts

191 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
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Use drilled 50p coins circa 2012-2013 - it is well known that with these the soundstage will open up & the treble will sing. Some complain that the bass can sound a tad dry though. Use proper blu-tac for goodness sake!

deeen

6,080 posts

245 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
quotequote all
Digger said:
Use drilled 50p coins circa 2012-2013 - it is well known that with these the soundstage will open up & the treble will sing. Some complain that the bass can sound a tad dry though. Use proper blu-tac for goodness sake!
Queen's head up or down?

colin_p

4,503 posts

212 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
quotequote all
Digger said:
Use drilled 50p coins circa 2012-2013 - it is well known that with these the soundstage will open up & the treble will sing. Some complain that the bass can sound a tad dry though. Use proper blu-tac for goodness sake!
Many say the pre 1997 larger diameter and thicker coins are better, but they have to be used with orange rubber pads cut from an old spacer hopper stuck to the tails side of the coin with copydex.

TonyRPH

12,972 posts

168 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
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I have felt pads <- link - on the bottom of my speakers and stands.

Sounds absolutely fine.

I used to be quite anal about this - to the point where when we had a place with carpet in concrete, I made absolutely sure that the spikes pressed right down to the concrete, and spent a lot of time levelling them up.

Now we have laminate flooring over concrete, I just use the abovementioned felt pads.

Digger

14,678 posts

191 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
quotequote all
deeen said:
Digger said:
Use drilled 50p coins circa 2012-2013 - it is well known that with these the soundstage will open up & the treble will sing. Some complain that the bass can sound a tad dry though. Use proper blu-tac for goodness sake!
Queen's head up or down?
Face down as her visage adds stability & a certain je ne sais quoi to the listening experience. I'm sure I have some old articles I printed out from Stereophile somewhere.

This side up!


GravelBen

15,686 posts

230 months

Wednesday 29th March 2023
quotequote all
Digger said:
Face down as her visage adds stability & a certain je ne sais quoi to the listening experience. I'm sure I have some old articles I printed out from Stereophile somewhere.

This side up!

That side also has the centre conveniently marked so that you don't get it off centre and unbalance the soundstage.

Biker 1

7,730 posts

119 months

Thursday 30th March 2023
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I have a pair of Q Acoustics floor standers. They come with spikes & rubber 'boots' that fit under, specifically designed for wood floors. Seem to work OK & no damage to floor....