Blue Horizon Spike Shoes MkII
As well as protecting the floor or equipment rack, the shoes are intended to enhance sound quality by suppressing resonances that can result in sonically damaging microphony, which is then fed back to the equipment and can find its way into the audio chain. This resonance suppression is achieved by filling the machined stainless-steel outer casing with what the manufacturer describes as a “chaotic cork and rubber mix”.
This proprietary combination of materials has differing elasticities and frequencies claimed to cancel out resonances equally across the audio band. Measuring 38mm in diameter and at 7.5mm thick (6.5mm at the centre-point), the shoes allow for spike loading of up to 100kg.
Positioning them underneath the cones fitted to my 300B valve monoblocks, I play Laurent Garnier’s Tales Of A Kleptomaniac. The track has a big, thumping bass line running throughout, and with the shoes installed the lower frequencies suddenly come across as tighter and better controlled.
Although certainly not the most affordable spike shoes currently available, Blue Horizon’s MkII solution offers an effective means of protecting equipment racks and floors, while the resonance-controlling construction delivers impressive sonic rewards too. NR
DETAILS
Product: Blue Horizon Spike Shoes MkII
Price: £80 for a set of four
Type: Loudspeaker spike shoes
Read the full review in March 2020 issue 460
Inside this month's issue: Arcam Radia A25 integrated amp, iFi Audio iDSD Diablo 2 DAC/headphone amp, Eversolo DMP-A8 streamer/DAC/preamp, Line Magnetic LM-845IA valve amp, Record Store Day Spring Drop, standmount loudspeaker Group Test and much, much more
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