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In Reply to: RE: Another LACK question posted by fstein on July 20, 2016 at 08:12:08
"fairly solid floor"? I vote no.
You would be negating a virtue of your fairly solid floor. To the degree that the floor is not totally solid (none are), you would furthermore be adding a source of instability between your tt and a slightly unstable support structure.
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Assuming no earthquakes, that is.
I'm not convinced of any audiophile benefit. Seems like inexpensively modified hi-fi furniture. An image shows several audio components stacked on top of each other, shared on the limited surface area of the shelves. I think the design-concept functions at the opposite end of rigidity, which tends to be a key-factor when building racks and stands, along with the use of vibration/resonance control devices positioned under each audio component and a dedicated, solid shelf surface area for primary support, with a rigid interface running right down to the floor. If components must be stacked, special vibration/resonance control footers should be implemented as an effective compromise. Furthermore, adding a tonewood board with pads or footers positioned between the stacked components can sometimes be of notable sonic benefit for custom system tuning efforts, IME.
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