I see this practice a lot, and then I see amps placed on some sort of low-rise platform. I would think the latter is the preferred method, so I'm a little confused as to why I see both. Is it purely preference?
I see this practice a lot, and then I see amps placed on some sort of low-rise platform. I would think the latter is the preferred method, so I'm a little confused as to why I see both. Is it purely preference?
I see this practice a lot, and then I see amps placed on some sort of low-rise platform. I would think the latter is the preferred method, so I'm a little confused as to why I see both. Is it purely preference?
I would always place my components on a 1 and a half inch slab of maple butcher block which would sit on the carpet
the issue is what level of de-coupling is used, not what it sits on. amps typically don't like to have floor resonance added to their signal. and if you have a highly resoving system what your amps sit on will affect performance. and so you have to start with what sort of floor do you have? is it suspended wood (a trampoline)? is the suspended wood floor braced underneath the amps? is it concrete? or wood glued directly to concrete? your rack and footers need to deal with the floor and whatever level of decoupling your amp prefers. one size does not fit all.
so setting amps directly on the floor is not a problem in and of itself....as long as the floor-amp interface gets the job done. i can set my dart stereo amp on the floor on the Wave Kinetics A10-U8 footers and it sounds the same as on my Box Furniture amp stand with those same footers. i like the additional height of the amp stand so i use it. of course, my floor is wood glued to concrete. so it is a stable platform.
i think optimizing your amps as far as floor-amp interface is really important and requires some open minded experimentation to find what works best.
some amps are even designed to sit on the floor and include their own decoupling suspension. 2 years ago i had the big dart mono blocks (190 pounds each) for a month. over the first 6 hours of listening i wondered why i was getting a big bloat in the bass around 120hz. i read the manual on the mono blocks and saw i forgot to remove some shipping screws. these screws held the amp case still during shipping. removing them allowed the built in suspension to work, the hump went away and everything got much more delicate and resolving. darTZeel figured having an amp stand and footers for a 200 pound amp would be a problem so they designed in the method for optimization.
i don't know if you still use this approach, but my guess is 3 or 4 cones underneath the butcher block to ground the butcher block with the sub floor would improve transient snap and image focus. and it's a cheap fix. then i'd 'try' some sort of decoupling footer between the butcher block and the amps. the result of the footers would vary from amp to amp and depend on your floor type. but until you tried those things you would not know whether you have optimized the amps. and this approach is much cheaper than some of these expensive amp stands or decoupling stands which can run into the many thousands of dollars and do the same things.
the butcher block sitting on carpet will amplify resonance since it essentially floats. it may float less than the amp sitting on it's own feet but it will none the less float.
the mass of the butcher block will use the spikes to ground itself to the subfloor.
Placing a $10,000 amp on the floor/rug will make it sound like a $300 receiver.
I actually use Aurios Pro MIB on the butcher block and under the components.I never put feet under the butcher block and they work just fine Mike.
Now personally I would never put decouplers under my speaker spikes.
As usual there is no clear answer.
First there are many types of floors with very different mechanical properties and resonances. And amplifiers react very differently to isolation platforms.
Recently Martin Colloms reported that the Audio Research REF 150 tube amplifier sounded much better directly on the floor than on a Finite Elemente platform. For practical reasons I used to keep heavy amplifiers on strong rubber wheeled platforms - but soon found that some of them did not sound their best on my chariots!
I wasn't aware that Symposium is component specific. It has always been my understanding that for the others it was because of the relationship of the weight as well as the weight distribution with the damping bungs used as there is a range in compression where they work best.
I actually use Aurios Pro MIB on the butcher block and under the components.I never put feet under the butcher block and they work just fine Mike.
Now personally I would never put decouplers under my speaker spikes.