you could uncouple them using (soft) rubber or springs. Those would absorb =
the vibrations. It would be most practicly placing them on the ground or a =
surface. You have to take care that frequency-resonance of the material is =
lower than the lowest the speaker produces - you can test that puxing them =
down and guessing the freuquency by the up and down movements. sorry, I hop=
e one can understand my bad english
=46abio
Em ter=E7a-feira 16 novembro 2010, =E0s 16:10:32, Philipp escreveu:
you could uncouple them using (soft) rubber or springs. Those=
would absorb the vibrations. It would be most practicly placing them on th=
e ground or a surface. You have to take care that frequency-resonance of th=
e material is lower than the lowest the speaker produces - you can test tha=
t puxing them down and guessing the freuquency by the up and down movements=
=2E sorry, I hope one can understand my bad english
Fabio
Em ter=E7a-=
feira 16 novembro 2010, =E0s 16:10:32, Philipp escreveu:
re,
to reduce the loudness in every room except the one with
rs. The issue seems to be mainly bass frequencies, which is hardly
rise. Physically decoupling the speakers from the walls would be
st appropriate solution in this specific case. Currently some
rs hang while some sit on wall-mounted boards.
the best but still reasonably easy/cheap way to decouple the
rs?
sses so far:
ging is better than wall-mounted boards
oupling actually helps, at least a bit
r any comments
s,
p
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