Thad E Ginathom
Well-Known Member
For quite a while now, I've been using High-Density Compacted Wood Pulp stands for my desktop speakers. Oh, that's piles of books in ordinary-speak :lol:. They get the drivers to the required hight, and they are certainly solid, but they do pass vibration through to the desktop. I'd been wondering about some better (even better-looking, to be honest! ) solution and, some time ago, came across these:
Isoacoustics ISO-L8R Monitor Stands.
On the web page, they really don't look much, but they are aimed at the Pro, Studio market, and seem to be well received.
Getting into an offtopic conversation on another thread made me think these could do with a thread of their own...
When I get around to it, and get a few other liabilities sorted first, I'll be your guinea pig . I'll post a video on Youtube :lol:
Here is one review on Gearslutz --- from a guy who shares our YouTube reservations but is impressed with the product.
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Isoacoustics ISO-L8R Monitor Stands.
On the web page, they really don't look much, but they are aimed at the Pro, Studio market, and seem to be well received.
Getting into an offtopic conversation on another thread made me think these could do with a thread of their own...
Actually, I want these: isoacoustics, but I don't want to buy before I know what speakers I will end up, or else I might waste money on the wrong size.
Santy said:Video introduction to ISO-L8R155 speaker stands
This is simply ridiculous. I can hear one hell of a difference on my crappy laptop speakers. Clearly the audio is manipulated.
Thad E Ginathom said:Not so fast! Check out Gearslutz. OK, they are Gear Sluts, by definition, and even pros have their own susceptibility to snake oil, albeit different to the audiophile flavours --- but they tend to be less prone to buying complete rubbiish, especially when it looks like cheap plastic. Which, on the web, this does.
Santy said:IMO, making a "video" for this kind of comparison and asking the viewer to hear the difference itself is ridiculous in first place.
It is like recording audio from speakers driven by two different amps and challenging the viewer about the difference they can hear irrespective of what system they play it on. Heck, the video might have an audio stream of less than 96 kbps for that matter.
Thad E Ginathom said:I agree with you so much that I almost didn't bother to even watch the Isoacoustics video.
Putting, or watching, hifi "demos" on Youtube actually shocked me the first time I encountered it. It just leaves me thinking WTF? WHY EVEN TRY TO DO THIS? In ITALIC CAPS.
Santy said:FWIW, I am a believer of speaker stands but not willing to buy this claim as shown in the video.
Thad E Ginathom said:About this video... either it is fake, or something is big enough to survive even the Youtube pipeline. Assuming basic integrity of the company (and they would certainly have used superb equipment to record that demo, not just some handy-cam) then all I can say is, I wouldn't buy the speakers on the basis of that, or any video, but there may be evidence there to buy the stands.
When I get around to it, and get a few other liabilities sorted first, I'll be your guinea pig . I'll post a video on Youtube :lol:
Here is one review on Gearslutz --- from a guy who shares our YouTube reservations but is impressed with the product.
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