apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Good Questions: "Shock Absorbers" for Media Stand?

min020609.jpgMarcus sent us a good question: We own a Min Media Stand (purchased from DWR). It sits on our hardwood floors and hold all of our media equipment (dvd & cd player, receiver, etc.). When our niece and nephew come over with all of their energy from jumping around they are able to put a pause on a playing dvd or a skip on a cd...

(Note: Include a pic of your problem and your question gets posted first.
Email questions and pics
with QUESTIONS in subject line to:
sf(at)apartmenttherapy(dot)com)

 
 

Aside from chaining them down, are there any casters with "shock absorbers" or any other solutions folks have found helpful. Thanks.

Please let Marcus know of any solutions you've used or seen in the comments below...

Tags

Good Questions

Related Links

Share

Comments (15)

I'm thinking you could try sitting the media stand on a thick rug. That will sure absorb some of the motion on the floor and keep it from affecting the electronics in the stand.

posted by eddie p on February 6th 2009 at 2:28pm
view eddie p's profile

I would simply inform the little darlings that running, jumping and other horseplay inside the house is not acceptable behavior - That's what the outdoors is for...

posted by bepsf on February 6th 2009 at 2:31pm
view bepsf's profile

I'm thinkin'-
Rather than isolate the shock energy from floor "up"-
Look into isolating the individual Component(s) by :

A) getting a thick (or 2/3 ply) layer of Neoprene to use as a Pad below each Component.

B) Using a piece of wood the size of the components footprint; with Silicone Gel Pads set beneath at each of the 4 corners (think Breast Implants) to cushion the shock energy.

C) Filling a wooden Tray (Think Bed "Serving" Tray) with sand or foam pellets and putting the CD/DVD palter on top of the filled tray.

D) Cut the legs off of the RugRats!!!
Simply!

posted by Man_ofSteel on February 6th 2009 at 2:36pm
view Man_ofSteel's profile

What kind of TV is that with a white bezel? Is it a Sony?

posted by Rick Roberts on February 6th 2009 at 2:36pm
view Rick Roberts's profile

Back in the days when my car only had a cassette player, I used an adapter for my personal CD player, the consequence being that every time I went over a bumpy bit of road, or hit a pothole, the CD skipped or stopped completely.

I got a small piece of that rubberized gripping mat, the kind that can be used under a rug, or inside drawers to stop things slipping about. I sat the CD player on this, and although it still skipped in big potholes, it stopped it skipping on less bumpy roads.

It might not work for you, but it is a cheap option to try first. It can be trimmed to size and they also make it in lots of different colours.

posted by jojomodjo on February 6th 2009 at 2:37pm
view jojomodjo's profile

a a material, sorbothane (google it) is quite adept at absorbing shock. crutchfield began selling it in sheets, but you can also find it as bumpers, etc.

i agree, with the playing is for outside rule, too...

posted by redneckmodern on February 6th 2009 at 2:40pm
view redneckmodern's profile

they make these for high end gear

http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=240-720

not sure if they are kid proof

posted by joeshack on February 6th 2009 at 2:44pm
view joeshack's profile

I agree with trying to isolate the components rather than the casters.

posted by als1 on February 6th 2009 at 2:52pm
view als1's profile

Cork will absorb shocks, too. Try it under the feet of your components.

posted by JefferyK on February 6th 2009 at 2:53pm
view JefferyK's profile

Hee hee hee...playing is for outdoors. You don't have kids, do you? :) Playing is for ALL THE TIME!

posted by BambiJo on February 6th 2009 at 3:26pm
view BambiJo's profile

Mouse pads under everything or cork liners under equipment.

posted by LoriSF on February 6th 2009 at 4:55pm
view LoriSF's profile

My kids are taught not to act like animals in other peoples' homes. Why is that such a foreign concept?

posted by GHB on February 6th 2009 at 5:00pm
view GHB's profile

"Playing is for ALL THE TIME!"

No - Kids need to be taught from the start that there is a time and place for play and a time and place for other activities such as eating, cleaning up, sleeping and learning...

...otherwise you end up with self-centered brats who have no boundaries, no limits and no sense of responsibility.

posted by bepsf on February 6th 2009 at 7:14pm
view bepsf's profile

Off topic...but where is the orange rug from???

posted by short giraffe on February 6th 2009 at 10:51pm
view short giraffe's profile

Vibrapods

posted by cscamp20 on February 8th 2009 at 12:47am
view cscamp20's profile