How do you attach your speakers to their stands?

admin_exported

New member
Aug 10, 2019
2,556
5
0
My Soundstyle Z1 stands have spikes on the top for the speakers to rest on but i'm going to get some new speakers and wondered if there was a less damaging way to do it. I used to just use bluetack when i mounted them on shelves.
 
Nothing more technical than blue tack for me! As yet I havent seen any audiophile blue tack which improves the sound, but if I do I'll probably give it a try...
emotion-1.gif
 
Mixing blue and white, 30% blue to 70% white gets the best overall results.

(The above may have been made up and totally wrong.)
 
JohnDuncan:I use white-tak, which is actually better than blu-tak in terms of imaging.

Excellent news John.

Tesco only had white Blu-Tack so I had to use it for my new speakers.
 
I've got Red-Sparkly-Tack for Christmas, adds a layer of sleigh bells to every piece of music. Sounds great on Rammstein!
 
White-tak is good for a broader range of frequencies. Blu-tack is good for the highs, Red-tack for the lows. Pink-tak would also be good, but only if C-Weighted.

And yes, blu-tack may discolour the veneer a little but, that's why you stick it to the bottom of the speakers and not the sides..
 
al7478:What about it pulling the veneer away with it?

Thats what those flippy plastic slice/spatula thingies in the kitchen utensil drawer are for. (Gently seperates speaker from top-plate without marking veneer by 'slicing' horizontally through the Blu-Tack first.) Just select one that is thin enough to go in the gap.

plastic-spatula.JPG
 
Blue tack works really well but it is directional, be sure to stick it to the speaker first then to the stand.
 

TRENDING THREADS