I use Center Stage Ultra LS 2.25 and there are no issuesNo problem, my Center Stage2 1.5 has a diameter of 38 mm and if I were to upgrade to the Ultra TT in the future, These have a diameter of 2", approximately 51 mm.
Thx Vassil
I agree. Mine are situated in safe spots as determined by Christoph (tsaett) when he visited shortly after I received my O/IO (you can see where mine are placed if you enlarge the photo above) BTW I use Ultra TT under all other components....I had Ultra TT under my Extreme but with the weight of the O/IO combination I went with the Ultra LS 2.25. The sonic improvement was quite dramaticI see. However, what I'm trying to do is have my Center Stages replace the factory feet, since according to Emile, it's the only way to ensure no damage is caused to the Olympus, which is very heavy.
I wasn’t anxious to remove the stock feet. Initially I did have one rear foot in the wrong location which did interfere with the XDMI board. Plus Emile hadn’t posted his admonitions yet so I guess some trial and error on my part. Plus the great weight of the two components when stacked prompted me to use the much sturdier LS Ultra 2.25 foot which I had switched to previously under my Extreme showed a better sonic gain than did the Ultra TT. If I had to do it again I would take Emile’s adviceSteve, what was your reason for looking for an alternative location, perhaps Joe from Critical Mass told you that it was better there than the factory feet?
I quite worry about after some time, there may be marks left on the top surface of the Olypmus I/O.I have had no issues that I can see with the O stacked on the IO. That was the way recommended by Taiko and shown in all of their pictures. Mine are anodized silver
I quite worry about after some time, there may be marks left on the top surface of the Olypmus I/O.
Ideally they should be placed separated.You could also decide not to stack them if you have the shelf space to do that.
Ideally they should be placed separated.
But with O, O I/O, router, switch and the associated LPS... etc, rack space is now becoming insufficient.
Like you, space for me was the mitigating factor. I had no choice but to stack. I suppose that with time marks might be left but right now if that is the case, I cannot see the marks. I took the advice of Taiko which was to stack the O on top of the IO. That's the way things will stay for me so I dont have any heart burn until some Taiko product replaces the O/IO and hopefully there will be a trade up program at which time the O and IO will got back to Taiko. IOW there is no issue. Stop worryingI quite worry about after some time, there may be marks left on the top surface of the Olypmus I/O.

Very true. Someone needs to offer a mini rack for the smaller items like the router, switch and LPS so they can all be on one shelf.
This is one of the single biggest reasons why I never liked vertical stacking in a condensed space. When designing shelving/racks if possible, the ability to have access to maneuver is paramount for me......I have been considering building something much lower, but wider. I would like to reduce the visual "footprint" a bit more. Initially, I thought the NAS would be too noisy, even with SSDs, in the audio bunker, but it's A-OK. That changed the amount of linear shelf space I forecasted. Also, having the connections facing rear-ward is visually better, but man-o-man when you want to try a cable or different DCD filter, it's a suicide mission.
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