Stereophile

ON THE INTERWEBS

Of late, Stereophile has written a lot about vibration-isolating footers under loudspeakers. I have been listening to the Magico M-Pods (under the Magico M2 loudspeaker, which won our Loudspeaker of the Year Award for 2020, and which I’ll review, in follow-up fashion, in an upcoming issue of this magazine). Following an impressive demo at a 2019 audio show, I also tried IsoAcoustic footers under the Revel Ultima Salon2 loudspeakers.1 Michael Fremer tried them under his Wilson Alexxes.2 We both reported positive results.

The idea of isolating loudspeaker vibrations from floors is controversial. Many (perhaps most) designers believe that dynamic loudspeakers in particular—those with significant moving mass in their cones—should be rigidly connected to the floor as is typically done with spikes. A rigid connection of the of the cabinet in response to the motion of the cones, heavy woofers in particular. Cabinet motion could be expected to smear the loudspeaker’s sound.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Stereophile

Stereophile4 min read
Letters
When my Stereophile reaches my doorstep, the first thing I turn to is Herb Reichert’s reviews. I don’t care what he’s reviewing; I love how he writes about it. In April’s edition, he shared his thoughts on an unexpected emotional response to Brice Ma
Stereophile9 min read
Silent Angel Bonn NX
With every passing season, a new audiophile-grade network switch hits the market. These products, which can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars, do the same basic thing as network switches bought at Best Buy for $30 or so (except, in some cases, sl
Stereophile13 min read
The Lina chronicles
I was at least 40' away when I spied my first dCS Lina stack at CanJam. It was black, sitting conspicuously on a table emitting a strong Space Odyssey Monolith vibe. I can’t remember which headphones I used, but I do remember how good it felt to face

Related Books & Audiobooks