Afternoon all,
Please could I ask for your help?
Thanks to a less than understanding wife and a small house, if i want to play my vinyl the turntable has to be banished to a cramped spare bedroom upstairs.
I think there's only just enough room as it doubles as a storage room / home office so I could fit a 60cm wide rack in there - but the issue is the wobbly vibration leaden floor as the house is a 2003 barrat style home and not built like a fortress - at least the top floor. The floor is concrete downstairs, but the non concrete floorboards are pretty thin and vibration prone upstairs to the point that you can hear people when they are upstairs, from the lounge downstairs.
Its a bit of an all or nothing scenario and there's just enough space for an equipment rack to house a turntable and an amp for headphone listening.
The turntable in question is a Toshiba SR-370 / SME 3009 / Shure M97XE. Pre-amp is a Kenwood L-1000C and the headphones are Sony MDR 850. (I do have a 1200 in storage, but my preference is to use the Tosh which has a heavy composite plinth).
What should I do? I see my options are
1) Get rid of the turntable for something more lightweight like a Rega. Would this work better in this scenario, or am I better off with something where the plinth has some heft and weight to it?
2) Improve the vibration isolation of the Tosh further by fitting some alternative feet to the Toshiba. The original ones are a bit 'iffy' and I know its a non standard screw thread - BUT I can solve that and fit something like Isonoe, or the sort of things that Technics 1200 users are upgrading to?
3) Then the rack itself - which way should I go? Basic table and fit loads of big marble slabs, or small and lithe quadraspire table or something from Atacama with spikes on the bottom, to spike it to the floor? My feeling was that this would carry the vibrations up into the turntable more, but I am not an expert.
In which scenarios are a spiked table best anyway? Concrete floor?
I have a 6yr old and I will be using this anyway while she is asleep, but the top floor of the house is so vibration prone - more interested in the sound quality suffering vs the needle actually jumping in the groove.
What do you think?? HELP!!!!
Cheers
Julian