TimberNationDISTURBEDnewTimberNation biggest, baddest Rack in the World4" thick shelves 66" long and 22"deep This rack is made from Pennsylvania Hard Maple and weighs 1200 lbs. It is 90" tall and 70" wide. FOR MORE RACKS PLEASE CLICK HERE TO GO TO MY WEBSITE or cal 8...12000.00

TimberNation biggest, baddest Rack in the World

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solidwood 

member since July 2011

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Condition
NEW
Payment methods
Ships fromTyrone, PA, 16686
Ships toUnited States
Package dimensions67.0" × 30.0" × 8.0" (220.0 lbs.)
67.0" × 30.0" × 8.0" (220.0 lbs.)
67.0" × 30.0" × 8.0" (220.0 lbs.)
67.0" × 30.0" × 8.0" (220.0 lbs.)
67.0" × 30.0" × 8.0" (220.0 lbs.)
98.0" × 12.0" × 12.0" (200.0 lbs.)
Shipping carrierUPS
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4" thick shelves 66" long and 22"deep This rack is made from Pennsylvania Hard Maple and weighs 1200 lbs. It is 90" tall and 70" wide.

FOR MORE RACKS PLEASE CLICK HERE TO GO TO MY WEBSITE or cal 814 684 4112
We were recently published in Tone Audio Magazine. Click here to view article

All my racks are Hand made by me. They are not bought from someone else and RESOLD.
I have been making Furniture for over 40 years
Do you want a High-End Audio Rack that will last a lifetime and made by a real Craftsman?
I hand craft beautiful custom made HIGH-END AUDIO STEREO RACKS that offer GREAT ISOLATION VALUE to your components
They will last your life time and more
Made from Pennsylvania Hard-Woods
NATURES BEST ISOLATION AGENT
NO particle board or Plywood allowed here - all real wood

There is a pilot hole pre tapped for each shelf and all you have to do is match up the numbered shelfs to the numbered posts and screw in the screws with a cordless drill or a hand screw driver. 10 minutes and you are done.
This is a Strong Rack and it is very Attractive

Phone number is 814-684-4112
I am just a Woodworker and would like to share this with all the Audio World
This was written for me by one of the moderators at Audio Circle.Com.

There is quite a lot of fluff in the audio equipment arena, because audiophiles pay top dollar for silly things. When it comes to dampening and isolation there are a few schools of thought surrounding how to isolate your equipment from floor-borne vibrations and shocks and how to drain the electrical vibration inherent to the component itself. One school of thought believes in coupling the component to the floor through the hardest, densest material possible, such as granite. I think there are a number of inherent flaws to this. First and foremost, a coupled component allows vibrations to travel in both directions, allowing them to enter the component. This is often heard in resolving (I DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN BY RESOLVING SYSTEMS. COULD YOU POSSIBLY MEAN REVOLVING?) systems where there is a bit of a high frequency emphasis. The problems are further exacerbated by the fact that these materials usually exhibit a high frequency, natural resonance and thus cause 'ringing.' Pol! ycrystal is probably the best material in this camp in terms of its dampening properties. However, nature provided the best dampening material of all, wood. How can a tall maple tree stay erect during a severe wind storm? It is because the tree absorbs a lot of the energy and dampens it. The school of thought that I adhere to -- one that I think is rationally based on facts rather than psuedo-science and that proves itself in real-world listening tests -- is based on wood being a natural absorber of vibrations. A physically massive shelf system that uses thick platforms of rigid wood provides both great isolation and immunity from the transfer of vibration through the system. It also allows the pent up electrical vibrations (and honestly there is quite a bit, which can easily be demonstrated but isn't safe to experiment with if you don't know what you are doing) to be drained from the component, which results in clearer stereo imaging. This is theory in practice. Of course ! to harness the dampening effect of the wood shelves, the electrically borne vibrations in the component need to be channeled from the component into the wood. The science behind this is a little over my head, even though I have graduate school education in mathematical simulation of waves and energy dissipation. The conclusion is nevertheless simple; use brass cones (cone pointing into the wood) between the component and the platform and, voila, the best of both worlds. Recently many of my audio club members had a chance to rehear my system after I had inserted the maple platforms into my system. Their comments about the improvements (not knowing what all I had done)were raves and praises. Man can still not match nature in many ways.

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