| AURIOS
Media
Isolation
Bearings |
|
| Paul
Szabady |
| 12
June
2000 |
Specifications
Manufacturer:
Vistek, Inc.,
Tempe, AZ
Web: www.vistek-inc.com
Distributor:
Media Access
2660 County
Road D
Woodville, WI
54028
Price: $299.00
per set of
three bearings
(one set
necessary for
each component
to be
isolated)
Warranty: 5
years
Tel:
800-830-1575
Fax: 715 698
3256
Web: www.auriosmib.com
"So
what does
all this
vibratory
muck do to
our systems?
"Mud
and
murk"
sums it up:
blurring,
loss of
focus,
truncated
transient
response,
plodding
rhythms,
compression
of dynamics,
and shifting
of timbre
all occur to
some
degree."
Aurios
Media
Isolation
Bearings
In
many ways the
most
significantly
cost effective
advances in
the quality of
home playback
over the last
dozen or so
year have been
in the
increased
effectiveness
of isolation
and damping
products. That
a well set-up
and
well-isolated
budget system
can musically
outperform a
mega-buck
system
haphazardly
and
incompetently
arrayed is now
a given. And
as new
products have
shown up on
the market I
have made it a
duty to
audition as
many as
possible and,
until I
retired from
retail
high-end audio
4 years ago
(after 25
years), to
recommend
them.
Dating
back to the
ubiquitous
Mortite, to
the original
Tip-Toes (and
their progeny)
on through
various lossy
elastomer
isolators, to
special
shelves and
racks, and
finally to the
air isolation
platforms,
commercial
products (not
to mention all
the DIY
efforts)--all
these devices
and tweaks
have
increasingly
allowed
components to
do their job
in the real
world, albeit
with limited
and varying
degrees of
effectiveness.
Vistek,
Inc. designs
and
manufactures
micro-vibration
isolation
bearings and
dampers. Based
on proprietary
and patented
vibration
control
technologies
Vistek's
products serve
a wide range
of
applications:
ranging from
the high-tech
atomic
tunneling
force
microscopes
and silicon
wafer
polishing
tools, e.g.,
to civil
engineering--bridge
and tower
construction.
The Aurios are
Vistek's first
consumer audio
product.
The
Aurios Media
Isolation
Bearings, as
the name
implies,
provide
isolation for
all media
components:
turntables, CD
players, tape
decks,
preamps, amps
and
loudspeakers,
but also for
DVD, VCR, TV,
microphones,
instrument
amps and other
performance,
broadcast and
recording
components.
The
Aurios
bearings are
designed to
isolate the
component from
horizontal
micro-vibrations.
Vistek's
experience in
civil and
structural
engineering,
and in the
high-tech
world taming
and
eliminating
micro-vibrations,
has given them
a long
experience in
understanding
the problems
encountered
and
engineering
effective
solutions.
There
is constant
low-level
vibratory
activity going
on around us.
Sometimes it
crosses our
threshold of
perception,
but most of
the time it
just lurks in
the
background. In
addition to
our mechanical
devices
generating
this
low-frequency
crud, there's
the vibratory
energy of the
Earth
itself--a
problem even
in
non-earthquake
zones. In
Vistek's
analysis and
experience,
most of this
horizontal and
vertical
energy lies in
the 10 to 100
Hz range.
Historically
the horizontal
component has
not been well
addressed in
the
marketplace.
Furthermore,
vertical
vibrations can
quickly
transform into
horizontal
ones. Think of
the growing
and expanding
ripples when
you plop a
stone into a
still
lake--the
spreading
circles are
the horizontal
vibes. An
isolation
device that
isolates
horizontally
is then just
good applied
physics.
If
the goal of
audio is to
produce only
meaningful
vibrations
(music) and to
ignore the
non-musical
lattice of
vibrations
that is
physical
reality,
effective
isolation
becomes
essential. The
Aurios
bearings begin
to isolate for
frequencies as
low as 1/2 Hz,
so even the
fundamental
resonance of
the ground is
being
isolated.
Neat! A set of
3 bearings
will easily
support at
least 1000
lbs. so any
known
component can
be used on
them. The only
contact a
component
makes with the
Earth is at 3
tiny points at
the top and
bottom of the
ball bearings,
and as these
balls are very
very hard and
the points
very very
small, the
component
"floats"
and thus, is
isolated.
The
individual
Aurios bearing
resembles a
sort of metal
Oreo cookie:
there are 2
halves to the
"cookie".
The
"cream-side"
of each half
contains a
precision
bearing race
in which the 3
precision ball
bearings ride.
A black Delrin
bearing-keeper
completes the
visual analogy
to an Oreo
cookie--the
Delrin looking
like the cream
(chocolate in
this case).
The 2 halves
are then held
together by a
locking screw.
The
two halves of
the device
move laterally
(within a set
limit) in a
frictionless
way riding on
the bearings,
much like an
Oreo cookie on
a hot day when
the cream
center has
gotten very
mushy. Except
in this case
the feeling is
like stepping
into a puddle
of Mobil One
synthetic oil
with
leather-soled
shoes and then
attempting to
walk on
slightly wet
ice--frictionless.
Playing
manually with
the bearing is
very tactilely
satisfying,
with the
ultra-precision
and high
manufacturing
quality of the
Aurios being
readily
apparent.
The
bearings are
self-centering.
When placed on
a flat level
surface,
displacing the
top half of
the bearing
and then
releasing it
results in the
Aurio
automatically
re-centering
itself. The
goal in
installing
them is
maintaining
this
self-centering
action and the
oily-leather-on-wet-ice
feel when a
component is
placed on top
of the
bearing. The
key concepts
here are LEVEL
and FLAT, and
this cannot be
emphasized too
strongly! The
surface under
the bottom of
the bearing
must be level
and flat;
ditto for the
bottom surface
of the
component
which contacts
the top of the
Aurios.
When
properly
executed, the
component will
seem to float
in a
frictionless
lateral
movement. When
done
incorrectly
the bearing
will lock and
become similar
to a spike in
its effect.
The isolation
improves with
correct
set-up, both
in cut-off
frequency and
degree of
isolation, so
it is
essential to
pay careful
attention to
installation.
This
might sound
tweaky and
intimidating,
but I found
that a little
practice soon
made it a
snap. The
results of
set-up can be
easily tested
by displacing
the component
slightly
laterally and
then counting
the number of
sways until it
self-centers
and comes to
rest--the more
sways, the
better. Cables
and speaker
wires will
need to be
dressed when
they are
connected so
as not to
impede the
bearing's
motion. It
won't do its
THING, if it
ain't got that
SWING!
Paradigm
Shift #1: the
component will
move laterally
when touched,
upsetting that
feeling of
psychological
security that
immobility can
evoke. This is
soon overcome.
The need to
develop a slow
and careful
hand when
cueing or
changing
records or
CDs, or when
operating
controls will
result in a
steep learning
curve. Ten
minutes of
listening and
I was
motivated
enough to want
to be
nicknamed
"Slow
Hand".
Paradigm
Shift #2: the
movement of
the
loudspeakers
might also
challenge some
preconceptions.
I know I had
to consciously
"bracket"
my
presuppositions
and theories
of how
speakers
should be set
up in order to
be open-minded
about what the
Aurios do.
These too, are
easily
overcome, as
one listen
dispels 10,000
preconceptions.
So
what does all
this vibratory
muck do to our
systems?
"Mud and
murk"
sums it up:
blurring, loss
of focus,
truncated
transient
response,
plodding
rhythms,
compression of
dynamics, and
shifting of
timbre all
occur to some
degree. Its
pervasiveness
becomes
conspicuous by
its absence.
If a
non-isolated
system can be
likened to
viewing a
landscape
through a
dirty picture
window on a
foggy day, the
system
isolated by
the bearings
is akin to
that same view
through a
clean window
on a clear
bright day of
low humidity.
"I
know that in
my case,
having
auditioned
countless
products
over the 25
years I
spent in
audio, it's
very easy to
become
blasé,
skeptical,
and
jaded--the
old
"been
there, heard
that"
syndrome.
With the
Aurios, I am
now
(finally)
consistently
hearing what
I've always
wanted out
of audio…"
I
listened to
the Aurios
bearings under
various
components, in
various
systems, in
three
different
physical
locations in
my home. The
optimum
performance of
the bearings
is experienced
when ALL
components in
the system are
floated. This
can be
overwhelming
at first. The
sudden and
enormous
increase in
sonic and
musical
information
can create a
kind of
temporary
mind-blowing
perceptual
chaos.
Fortunately it
is
short-lived.
My
main reference
system
consists of a
Linn Sondek LP
12 with Origin
Live modified
Rega RB300 arm
and Grado
Signature TLZ-V
cartridge,
amplified by a
Meitner PA6i
preamp and STR
55 power amp,
connected to
Sound Lab
Dynastats with
Analysis Plus
Oval 9 speaker
cables. My CD
player was a
Marantz
CD67SE.
Isolation and
damping
devices
included 2
Townshend
Seismic Sinks,
Sims Navcom
Silencers,
Vibrapods and
an Archetype
rack. This is
a fairly
high-resolution
and neutral
wide-bandwidth
system, and I
thought it was
pretty good
myself--until
I heard the
full monty
Aurios effect
with every
component
being
isolated. For
5 minutes I
was speechless
and
overwhelmed.
How had I
lived with the
blurry
incoherent
sound before
the Aurios?
But
say one
doesn't want
to buy 6 or 7
sets of the
Aurios at
once. Where do
you start? I
would
recommend at
least 2 sets
and then
experimenting
within one's
system. But
ultimately one
should hear
the full
effect of the
entire system
floated. I
first started
with one set
under the
preamp, then I
moved to the
source. I
tried
turntable
only, speakers
only,
turntable and
speakers
only--in short
just about
every
combination
possible. I
repeated all
this on 5
preamps, 3
power amps, 3
sets of
speakers, 2 CD
players, 1 DVD
player and 5
turntables.
Whew!
Consistent
in all these
systems and
components
(and
corroborated
by those who
did beta
testing on the
product in
their own
systems) are
the sonic and
musical
results.
Simply, everything--bass,
mids, highs,
timbre,
dynamics,
transient
response,
rhythm,
imaging, pace,
etc., is
clearer, more
natural, more
life-like, and
much more
musically
communicative.
The fog lifts,
and the murk
and mud
recede. A
wholesale
improvement
like this has
in the past
signaled to me
a genuine gain
in resolution,
and not merely
a reshuffling
of resonances
into a
different
frequency
range.
The
musical effect
is the most
important; in
many ways
listening to
music on my
systems now
takes on many
similarities
with how I
listen live. I
can shift
attention to
any
instrument,
follow it
easily in
crescendos and
ensemble, and
consciously
shift
attention to
any aspect of
the
performance at
will.
It
is also hard
to ignore the
impression
that I was
listening to
the intrinsic
sound of the
component for
the first
time--a sound
that likely
even the
designer had
never heard.
Particularly
revelatory was
how
wonderfully
musical some
less costly
components
sounded.
Containing
good circuits,
but housed in
cost-conscious
chassis and
inexpensively
built, some of
these products
can sound
quite
impressive (I
speak of
products like
NAD, AMC,
Rotel and
Hegeman).
Furthermore
the sound of
expensive,
build-conscious
(and
build-extravagant)
high-end
components
also improved
in the same
manner. The
build quality
and its higher
price are
called into
question here,
as the
improvement
with the
Aurios leads
to the
conclusion
that more
rugged
construction
isn’t
completely
effective.
What,
ultimately, do
the Aurios
really sound
like? It is
impossible to
know right now
because no
component has
yet been
designed with
them as an
integral
concept and
element. So
while there
might be
differences of
degree of
change with a
given
component, the
type and kind
of change is
consistent.
And it's all
to the better—both
sonically and,
most
importantly,
musically.
I
know that in
my case,
having
auditioned
countless
products over
the 25 years I
spent in
audio, it's
very easy to
become blasé,
skeptical, and
jaded--the old
"been
there, heard
that"
syndrome. With
the Aurios, I
am now
(finally)
consistently
hearing what
I've always
wanted out of
audio, and
what inspired
me to enter
the audio
field in the
first place.
The
terms
"revolutionary"
and
"paradigm
shifting"
have become
almost cliche
due to overuse
and misuse in
"Biz-speak,"
but the Aurios
are a genuine
breakthrough
product in my
experience.
Simply put,
I've
experienced
more pleasure
and more
realistic
musical sound
with the
Aurios
bearings in my
system than
with anything
else, since
this hobby
first took my
musical
innocence some
28 years ago.

|