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Your cart is empty.Andrey
Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2025
Box says its aluminum. Really?
Dr. Stuart Gitlow
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2024
Isolation feet for stereo components generally provide some method of separating vibratory waves present in the room from feeding back to the component. The biggest concern is for turntables where low frequency waves might cause vibration of the surface on which the turntable is located. Separating that out generally requires that the isolation unit have an internal dampening mechanism. This could be an oil-filled chamber, or perhaps a spring.High end isolation feet cost well over $1000. Spring-based isolation feet can cost anywhere from $50-200. Here what we have are simply aluminum pucks. Each puck has a small ring of rubber at the base. Most modern turntables already have feet that provide isolation superior to what these pucks might provide, and I'm unconvinced that the thin rubber ring here will do much in terms of providing isolation. There's also the issue as to how you'll mount these feet. For instance, let's say you want to put them on an AR XA turntable, which simply has a wood perimeter with felt pads on it. How would you mount these feet? I looked at a Marantz turntable from the 70s and a Dual 1229 (also from the 70s), and didn't come up with any mounting solutions for which these pucks would work. Ultimately, I'll probably use them on a separate project where I need contemporary feet for a box, but it's not one where isolation abilities would be of value.
sonicd0012
Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2024
The media could not be loaded.
Travis Street
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2024
Worked great on this Bose 360. Little smaller than original but looks great.
Bees M.
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2024
I have a cheap turntable in a secondary system, and it has plastic feet on the bottom. The screws in these isolation feet don't match the holes in the turntable, but I like the idea here. The aluminum is solidly constructed, but there's honestly not much rubber to do the actual isolating. I'd like to think it's reducing vibration and improving sound quality, but I can't honestly say I can hear a difference. I'm not in a position to do a blind A/B test, and it's a cheap turntable in the first place (garbage in, garbage out). But cosmetically, they do look great and make the turntable look and feel a little less cheap.
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