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Wooden bookshelf speaker stands
Wooden bookshelf speaker stands






Threaded doesn't mean just so that they're easy to get onto the cabinet. One top tip that I'm going to give you in terms of setup hints, and another reason why these sorts of feet are important on floor standing speakers in particular, is because they're threaded. The other nice thing is the spike will go through the carpeting and now be coupled to the flooring under it, whatever that surface is, so that's an important thing. And the reason is, is that if you have a large floor standing speaker, it's unlikely, if you have a high pile carpet, that these feet will dig into it enough, and the speaker cabinet could actually not be very stable, and that could be dangerous, so in those cases I really recommend spike feet.Īny customer who I talk to that says what feet should I get, and they say that they have carpeting, definitely go with the spikes. If you have carpet, whether it's an area rug or it's wall-to-wall carpeting, I would not recommend using these rubber feet. It's like anything else: until you try it in your own home with your own speakers in the room that they're in, you're not really going to know a hundred percent which one is going to perform better. That also can be a bad thing, because if you're on a suspended floor (you're not in a basement, or in an apartment building where it's concrete), transmitting that vibration to the floor can be a good or bad thing, depending on the room.Īgain, the recommendation I have is, if you can, get both and try both in your system. If you have a little bit too much bass you're finding in the system, you may actually want to look at a spike foot instead of a rubber foot, because it's going to drain more of the low frequency vibration energy from the speaker and put it into your floor. Really it comes down to really a matter of choice and you will - because of what these two different type of feet are doing - in many cases find a difference in the bass performance. I've seen some people use coins as well to support them. With spikes you can get little cups that they sit in to prevent damage to the floor. Rubber bumpers or rubber feet can be good because they will restrict the amount of signal from the cabinet that's transferred into that flooring.Īlso, many people don't want to use speaker spikes and potentially damage their hardwood floors, for instance. These little bumpers are going to be way too small to support a large floor standing speaker, so again, rubber foot or spike, what's best? Well, if you have a solid surface floor, whether that's tile or concrete or laminated or natural hardwood, plank hardwood flooring, assuming that it's a solid flat surface floor, no carpet (we'll get to that in a minute) you really have the option of using either. Speaker Spikes or Rubber Feet For Floorstanding Speakers? Now you have only four points of contact between the bottom of the speaker and the surface that it's resting on, so you minimize the surface area down to four tiny little points, and also because it's a rubbery compliant material, you're going to damp and prevent some of that vibration from being transmitted or transferred down into the surface that the bookshelf speaker is sitting on. Many speaker manufacturers, including ourselves, actually will supply some of these with speakers. You can easily get these little rubber bumpers, as we call them. Obviously on a bookshelf speaker, you're not going to put necessarily big spike feet to have it sitting on a shelf or a cabinet. So yes, you absolutely need feet of some sort.

wooden bookshelf speaker stands

I've seen people with big floor standing speakers in a room sitting on a natural hardwood floor which is not perfectly flat and smooth, and at some frequencies you could actually hear some buzzing coming from the underside of the speaker.

wooden bookshelf speaker stands

You've got a large surface that, remember no matter how well braced or what the material is, a speaker cabinet is going to vibrate, and that vibration on the bottom of the speaker is going to be transmitted over the entire surface area to whatever it's sitting on if you don't have some sort of feet, and if there are voids there, as there will likely be, you can actually get buzzing. Why that's important is you're going to have some voids in there. You've got a large surface area there, and I can guarantee that the floor underneath the speaker is likely not perfectly flat.

wooden bookshelf speaker stands

To answer the question "can I just have my bookshelf speaker or my floor standing speaker just sitting flat on a surface with nothing underneath it, no feet at all?" The answer to that one is a definite no, and the reason is,you've got this entire surface of the bottom of the cabinet that is now contacting the bookshelf or the floor, if it's a floor standing speaker. If you'd like spikes they are available at no charge when you order any tower speaker by selecting Advanced Options and then Spikes.








Wooden bookshelf speaker stands