GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to July 31, 2007

 

Rega and vibrations

July 27, 2007

Hey, GoodSound! guys. I recently sold my system and scaled back to the Rega Mira 3/Apollo combo with Audio Art cables and the shockingly good Axiom M3 v2 speakers. I have no other placement option but to stack the Rega electronics and was wondering whether there is anything I could do to minimize vibrations. For instance, I wondered whether I could place Vibrapods between the two components to soak up some of the unwanted vibrations. Any ideas?

Keith

Your Vibrapod idea is a good one. I suspect you’ll be happy with the results. You could also try other methods. I’ve heard cork board is a good isolator, for instance. In addition to isolation, you could try mass loading: place a towel on the top component and lay a brick on top. This could help damp any unwanted vibrations. The key to component isolation and vibration control is to experiment until you hit upon the right combination. But the Vibrapod idea is good place to start, and a cost-effective solution too.


"Hoping I bought the right speakers….."

July 24, 2007

I really like the Harman/Kardon AVR-347 receiver. I’m looking forward to buying it, but I’m having second thoughts. I bought a pair of Cerwin Vega VE12 speakers (three-way, 300W peak). Is the Harman/Kardon AVR-347 too much power for these speakers? If so, is there a lower-wattage Harman Kardon that is good for those Cerwin Vega speakers? By the way, the Cerwin Vega speakers have a fuse on the subwoofer (if that helps). I don’t know much about audio equipment. I also listen to a broad range of music (house, rock, R&B, rap, classic rock). Hoping I bought the right speakers….

Richard

It is quite uncommon to damage loudspeakers due to driving them with too much power. Generally speaking, more power means that given average listening levels, you’ll be comfortably within the power limitations of the receiver, meaning that you won’t be overdriving it and therefore feeding damaging distortion to your speakers (which can harm them). So I would be more concerned if you had too little power and liked to listen really loud. More clean power is, all things being equal, better than less power -- both from a sound quality standpoint and not blowing up your speakers. Cerwin Vegas have always had a reputation for being good rock’n’roll speakers, so given your musical tastes and working within a reasonable budget, I’d say you’ve done just fine. Enjoy your new system.


Passive preamps

July 19, 2007

Are there disadvantages to a passive preamplifier? A friend of mine “in the business” has recommended against the purchase of one, favoring, obviously, a powered preamplifier. I have looked at the Channel Islands Audio models and the Monolithic Sound model and I wanted your opinion as to whether the passive preamplifier is a suggested purchase consideration.

Robert

The short answer is, "It depends." A passive preamplifier can be excellent if your source component provides enough gain. A passive preamplifier only attenuates gain -- i.e., lowers the input signal’s level -- and obviously cannot provide additional gain of its own. If your source does not have sufficient gain (check with the passive preamplifier’s manufacturer on compatibility issues with specific products), you may find that the sound is anemic and lacking dynamics. The plus side is that, with the right ancillary components, passives can sound amazingly transparent.


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