Anybody know how to tame a fireplace screen?

Early B.
Early B. Posts: 7,900
edited February 2024 in Clubhouse Archives
I have a fireplace screen in my den where the HT is. When my Hsu sub starts to rumble, the fireplace screen vibrates. It's a bit annoying. I really don't want to remove it every time I watch a movie or listen to music.

Any suggestions?
HT/2-channel Rig: Sony 50” LCD TV; Toshiba HD-A2 DVD player; Emotiva LMC-1 pre/pro; Rogue Audio M-120 monoblocks (modded); Placette RVC; Emotiva LPA-1 amp; Bada HD-22 tube CDP (modded); VMPS Tower II SE (fronts); DIY Clearwave Dynamic 4CC (center); Wharfedale Opus Tri-Surrounds (rear); and VMPS 215 sub

"God grooves with tubes."
Post edited by RyanC_Masimo on

Comments

  • brettw22
    brettw22 Posts: 7,623
    edited March 2004
    Is that a fireplace screen with glass? interlinked chains? what's it made out of?

    I can't think of a way to silence either of those other than to remove them.......or if possible put some sort of foam feet/padding on them at the contact points to see if the vibrations can be controlled from the ground source. Through the air though might not be possible to do...
    comment comment comment comment. bitchy.
  • phoneisbusy
    phoneisbusy Posts: 867
    edited March 2004
    Is it free standing or part of the fireplace?

    regards

    Dave
    Time is the best teacher. Unfortunately it kills all its students.
  • Early B.
    Early B. Posts: 7,900
    edited March 2004
    The fireplace screen is one of those tri-fold, freestanding types. No glass, but with a metal mesh throughout.
    HT/2-channel Rig: Sony 50” LCD TV; Toshiba HD-A2 DVD player; Emotiva LMC-1 pre/pro; Rogue Audio M-120 monoblocks (modded); Placette RVC; Emotiva LPA-1 amp; Bada HD-22 tube CDP (modded); VMPS Tower II SE (fronts); DIY Clearwave Dynamic 4CC (center); Wharfedale Opus Tri-Surrounds (rear); and VMPS 215 sub

    "God grooves with tubes."
  • phoneisbusy
    phoneisbusy Posts: 867
    edited March 2004
    I'd try Brett's suggestion of foam padding or something under the feet/contact points of screen. Probably won't work if you want to use the HT and have a fire though...
    Time is the best teacher. Unfortunately it kills all its students.
  • RuSsMaN
    RuSsMaN Posts: 17,986
    edited March 2004
    I'd start from the other direction, at the sub itself.

    Got anything under it? Garden Slate perhaps?

    Just a thought.

    Cheers,
    Russ
    Check your lips at the door woman. Shake your hips like battleships. Yeah, all the white girls trip when I sing at Sunday service.
  • faster100
    faster100 Posts: 6,124
    edited March 2004
    I have wood floors and had terrible vibration until i installed 2 16x16" slabs under it, of the garden variety. and painted it black. works great, The sub weighs 115 lbs, so it weighs the stones down nicely.
    MY HT RIG:
    Sherwood p-965
    Sherwood sd871 dvd
    Rotel 1075 amp x5
    LSI15 mains
    LsiC center
    LSIfx surround backs
    Lsi7 side surrounds
    SVS pb12/plus2


    2 Channel Rig:

    nad 1020 Pre-amp
    Rotel 1080 stereo amp
    Polk sda 2B
    kenwood grunt Tuner
    realistic lab 450 TT
    Signal cable IC
  • madmax
    madmax Posts: 12,434
    edited March 2004
    You could use the subwoofer box as firewood. :D
    madmax
    Vinyl, the final frontier...

    Avantgarde horns, 300b tubes, thats the kinda crap I want... :D
  • Early B.
    Early B. Posts: 7,900
    edited March 2004
    Yeah, I got a concrete slab under the sub. I guess my only option is to remove it when listening to bass heavy movies or music. Because of the mesh screen, I think it's gonna rattle no matter what I do to it.
    HT/2-channel Rig: Sony 50” LCD TV; Toshiba HD-A2 DVD player; Emotiva LMC-1 pre/pro; Rogue Audio M-120 monoblocks (modded); Placette RVC; Emotiva LPA-1 amp; Bada HD-22 tube CDP (modded); VMPS Tower II SE (fronts); DIY Clearwave Dynamic 4CC (center); Wharfedale Opus Tri-Surrounds (rear); and VMPS 215 sub

    "God grooves with tubes."
  • VR3
    VR3 Posts: 28,779
    edited March 2004
    You can attach vibrapods under each of the feet on the fireplace screen. Just a thought...... not sure if that would work
    - Not Tom ::::::: Any system can play Diana Krall. Only the best can play Limp Bizkit.
  • Jstas
    Jstas Posts: 14,842
    edited March 2004
    Originally posted by Early B.
    Yeah, I got a concrete slab under the sub. I guess my only option is to remove it when listening to bass heavy movies or music. Because of the mesh screen, I think it's gonna rattle no matter what I do to it.

    Unfortunatly, I don't think there is much you can do. I spoke with a gentleman here at work who does iron work. He has made a few fireplace screens from everything from brass to iron. He said that the screens are usually a fairly heavy guage for a screen to protect against a log rolling out and such too. Because they are a heavy guage, they need to "float" like a raised panel in a cabinet door. If they are tack welded or secured in another way, they will warp and disfigure when heated by a fire in the fireplace. What causes that is the inability of the screen to expand and contract evenly if it is secured in place.

    The advice he offered was to get some putty or even clay and stuff it in strategic places in the channel that holds the screen. It won't stop the screen from vibrating but it will cut down noise. He said that it may endup hardening over time but he can't really think of anything besides lead that wouldn't harden but still allow semi-free movement of the screen under expansion and contraction. Lead, with kids and pets around, is not a good idea and IMO, not a good idea at all in a living space.
    Expert Moron Extraordinaire

    You're just jealous 'cause the voices don't talk to you!
  • phoneisbusy
    phoneisbusy Posts: 867
    edited March 2004
    Okay, it's probably a dumb idea but have you tried covering the screen with a heavy blanket (one you don't mind getting dirty) or something? Something to smother the screen so that it won't rattle? Not sure if I described it properly. Grasping at straws anyways.

    regards

    Dave
    Time is the best teacher. Unfortunately it kills all its students.