Well, piggy backing off this thread, here are my observations of my Zanden Digital Equipment under 5 different scenarios in the same system (mine) involving bespoke rack, HRS M3X+Nimbus+DPX damping plates, and SRA Ohio XL Class Isobases:
1. Zanden on my equipment rack (4" thick birchply on 1.5" slab of slate)
2. Zanden + HRS M3X+Nimbus (Underneath) and HRS DPX or Artesania Damping Plates (On Top) on rack
3. Zanden + SRA Ohio XL Isobases on rack
4. Zanden + SRA Ohio XL Isobases (on top of HRS M3X shelf with HRS DPX damping plates) on rack
5. WINNER: Zanden + SRA Ohio XL Isobases (on top of HRS M3X shelf but NO DPX damping plate) on rack
In a word, 5 wins, hands down. It is clear to me that SRA really mean it when they say they have calibrated the SRA isobase to the specific equipment incorporating its dimensions, materials and weight distribution. For the FIRST TIME EVER in 10+ years, adding an HRS DPX damping plate did NOT work.
NOTES:
HRS M3X + Damping plates (or Stillpoints U6s with HRS Nimbus Couplers + Damping plates)
- great combinations.
- I NEVER use Stillpoints without HRS Nimbus Couplers, except with big Wilsons or the Gryphon where the elastomer would collapse under the weight.
- they add a complete surety of sound, an increased density of note and a purity of tone
- the signal gets stronger/denser more confident
- no change in tonality that i could discern (NOT the case with Stillpoints alone)
- bass power, propulsiveness is far stronger
- it proves to be a great combination with the Zanden which (under less ideal isolation circumstances) can come across as too filigreed or 'pretty'
- CONCLUSION: This is an almost ideal combination to my ears, because you get the organic qualities of Zanden which are tremendous and unique in my experience...but with detail, power, propulsive dynamics which have matched all of the major comers of its generation (Esoteric, etc) which were known for power, incisive detail, etc.
SRA Ohio XL Isobases
- This was a 'funky experience' for me
- For the first time, i learned that a surprisingly GREATER amount of bass transients, soundstaging can come from isolation of equipment than i EVER imagined.
- For the first time, even on extreme treble transients, i did NOT hear the sound come for a nano-second from the tweeters.
- The sound has completely pulled AWAY from the speakers
- Further, the soundstage is now more dramatically different than ever before with deep house spreading across the front, back, sides with ethereal noises/special effects, and classical dropping more dead center into the back of the soundstage...and even spreading out WAAY in the back once again
Now that seems 'normal' as an upgrade...but what is NOT normal (to me) is that in spreading the instruments out...i ALSO experienced a NEW order of priority in the instrumentation...ie, i heard certain violins become more prominent while other [same frequency] instruments took a back seat in priority/scale.
At first, it seemed like tonality or sound had changed...and yet each individual instrument seemed fine...exactly as before...no change in tonality
And then i figured out that by re-locating instruments, really precisely ordering/organizing instruments, you really start to understand how the artists were performing, how the mixer was working through the edits...and trying to relay what was happening. And thus a 'flatter' presentation becomes a mix of layers where the priorities of each instrument are presented to you, along with the actual notes, air, power, etc...
...couple this with a strange kind of organic presentation of silence (which i suspect in reality is just far, FAR better decay and details of when a note finishes into silence and when the new note starts)...and what happens is that not only do you get a far better presentation of each instrument within the ensemble context (ie, who is lead instrument, who is not, etc)...but you ALSO get a much better sense of how artists are pausing, playing off each other in the ensemble...
I have never heard this before in any isolation, or equipment that i have used do this to anywhere near this extent...not even the mighty Zanden, CJ or Gryphon...and not the HRS, Stillpoints, Artesania shelves, footers, dampers...i have to credit this to SRA.
Well done.
SRA Ohio XL Isobases + HRS M3X
My only other final note is that just as SRA Isobases are designed to be on even more secure racks (ie, SRA CRAZ Rack)...i decided to try the SRA on top of the HRS M3X shelf to further isolate everything from the floor/room...it worked well. Really well. Perhaps, our equipment rack might be inadvertently contributing to some of the original observations of the Zanden...in any event, i am 'guessing' that any vibration has reduced dramatically with the HRS M3X and on top of the HRS M3X, now the SRA Ohio XL.
Get commentary LL21 - thanks for writing.
Vibration physically alters audio equipment and no component is immune. How a given component reacts to vibration is a function of its design, materials, and placement - and given differences in those factors, no two components react exactly the same. While you can put component X on an SRA platform designed for component Y and receive benefit, the full performance that is the outcome of their Component Specific Design is gained when using a platform built for a specific component.
I've found that venue context or ambience along with dimensional attributes are sonic characteristics apt to be revealed further when vibration is mitigated. Same with attack and decay, micro-dynamic gradation, tonal shadings and harmonics coming off instruments. We don't realize we're hearing 'fuzzy edges' or blurring or even warmth until vibration in the reproduction chain is reduced. Sometimes, this can get cashed out as a heightened sense of presence and vitality. Sometimes the performance simply sounds more natural. One of my theories is vibration mitigation reduces temporal distortion of the signal and reveals its impact most immediately in those sonic characteristics dependent on time.
Since your SRA Ohio XL Isobases are on the first tier of the Ohio series, I'll tempt you to call Kevin Tellekamp to learn if further gains are possible. Please follow-up with any further improvements you uncover.