- Aug 10, 2019
- 2,556
- 5
- 0
Let me start off by saying WHF learned me a lot about hifi, and proven my assumptions wrong more than once.
That said, looking at reviews of equipment racks I'm baffled to see all kinds of sonic qualities being attributed to racks. I'm not talking about speaker stands here, but racks for players and amps. Example taken from the review of the WHF award winning Hifi Racks Podium:
"Once placed on the Podium, Cyrus’s Award-winning CD 8 SE CD player is fed the Ramsey Lewis Trio’s energetic Wade In The Water.
It serves up a muscular sound that times well, and is able to handle production dynamics and subtleties with ease.
This is a fast-paced rack that will give your kit a full sound along with a wide soundstage. Detailing here is also more than capable, and right on the nose for the money.
Tonally, the Podium doesn’t disappoint the listener either, with a propulsive, firm bass, smooth and fluid midrange and well-integrated treble."
Apparently, placing a Cyrus cd player in the rack somehow causes the signal that the player sends out to improve. How is that possible? The only thing I can think of is that this topend cd player vibrates and that this vibration has an appreciable effect on the signal that the cd player sends out (seems unlikely). Even if the rack could improve the signal by countering vibration, it sounds unlikely that it's possible to distinguish detailed sonic qualities from a rack, the way it's done in the review mentioned above.
Another question pops to mind: Does the equipment rack only exhibit these sound enhancing qualities with components that have any chance of inducing vibration (like cd players) or does the rack also improve the sound of components that have no moving parts (amp, DAC)? If so how?
I'm eager to learn something new once more.
That said, looking at reviews of equipment racks I'm baffled to see all kinds of sonic qualities being attributed to racks. I'm not talking about speaker stands here, but racks for players and amps. Example taken from the review of the WHF award winning Hifi Racks Podium:
"Once placed on the Podium, Cyrus’s Award-winning CD 8 SE CD player is fed the Ramsey Lewis Trio’s energetic Wade In The Water.
It serves up a muscular sound that times well, and is able to handle production dynamics and subtleties with ease.
This is a fast-paced rack that will give your kit a full sound along with a wide soundstage. Detailing here is also more than capable, and right on the nose for the money.
Tonally, the Podium doesn’t disappoint the listener either, with a propulsive, firm bass, smooth and fluid midrange and well-integrated treble."
Apparently, placing a Cyrus cd player in the rack somehow causes the signal that the player sends out to improve. How is that possible? The only thing I can think of is that this topend cd player vibrates and that this vibration has an appreciable effect on the signal that the cd player sends out (seems unlikely). Even if the rack could improve the signal by countering vibration, it sounds unlikely that it's possible to distinguish detailed sonic qualities from a rack, the way it's done in the review mentioned above.
Another question pops to mind: Does the equipment rack only exhibit these sound enhancing qualities with components that have any chance of inducing vibration (like cd players) or does the rack also improve the sound of components that have no moving parts (amp, DAC)? If so how?
I'm eager to learn something new once more.