Turntable vibration isolation for non-audiophiles
mannybolone
Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
A friend who was leaving out of town recently sold me his old Linn LP-12 for a ridiculously good price. Despite the fact that it's an early '80s model with no 45 switch (you have to use an adapter on the belt pulley!), it's a pretty sweet turntable. The only problem is that this sucker is really prone to even slight jolts, thus skipping the needle. I'm looking for recommendations on simple vibration isolation that works for other people but I'm trying the never-ending spider hole that usually comes with asking this question on audiophile boards and you get $1000 dollar solutions made from NASA-tested gel or some crazy shit like that.
Any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
Any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
Comments
Yep, been there. Great turntable but ridiculously sensitive. You just need to put it on a level, wall-mounted shelf otherwise it picks up every single vibration that goes through the floor. Pretty cheap and simple to do and will make a 1000% difference to your listening pleasure since you can actually enjoy the music without holding your breath and wincing every time someone walks across the room. Two brackets, a solid piece of wood/MDF, a spirit level and you're there. $30?
There's a circuit board mod you can get that will give you a 45 switch.
Shelf-mounted works for me, though I don't have a saw at home so finding a pre-made shelf that's at least 17 inches in depth might be a bit tricky.
As for the board mod, yeah, I had looked into it but the cost is so prohibitively expensive, I'm totally fine with using the adapter.
Thanks SS cloud!
At $159, these aren't exactly cheap, but they do the trick nicely:
http://www.musicdirect.com/p-7643-target-vw1-wall-mount-turntable-shelf.aspx
You might be able to find a used one on Audiogon.
EDIT: Shit, I just noticed that these are currently unavailable.
b/w
"Live in Northern California once, but leave before it makes you soft."
This is looking real good to me right now: http://www.theanalogdept.com/diy_tt_shelf.htm
But even reading this site is making my eyes glaze over. Technics 1200s really are the best when it comes to "the shit just works".
For starters, I live in LA (but somehow, I doubt that changes the sentiment much).
Luckily, being married to a former visual artist means that we do own both a hack saw and jigsaw but not a table saw or one of those sweet miter saws.
But if you ever saw my handiwork from shop class back in junior high, you'd recognize that putting a sharp, cutting tool in my hand is not wise. I have trouble cutting paper in a straight line.
Actually, yes - wrote you earlier to say Shanghai Gary is coming to town next week. Wanted to see if you wanted to link up with us. We grubbing.
You still buried under a ton of PL stuff?
that's the gospel right there. most things beyond it are snake oil. If these audiophools saw the archaic lathes the records were ACTUALLY cut on it might change their perspective. OR maybe not.
I just saw your email. responding now
http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051&productId=202336276&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&MERCH=REC-_-nosearch2-1-_-NA-_-202336276-_-N&locStoreNum=6234
That might be a bit large, but they do offer free cutting as a service so you could ask them to trim it a bit. If you don't see that board, I'm sure you can find a 1"x18"x6' and have them cut it to the width you'd like. And they'll have tons of shelving brackets to choose from.
I'd also pick up a cheap stud finder if you don't have one already.
Those Linns are super crazy sensitive, saw one last week... I'd destroy records w/ one of those suckers, but they must sound sweet.
Even though this could cost as much, if not more, than what I bought the turntable for, it feels more attractive now that I realize what a royal pain it is to use the 45 pulley adapter. It's amazing that such an expensive piece of equipment never came with a better solution built-in to begin with. Did the folks at Linn hate the 7" single or something?