Nick, I tried the middle of the floor also, but it didn't help much. My basement has been partitioned off into three separate rooms. The interior walls and the ground floor support columns are distributed in such a way that I don't have a spot that is very far from something that connects to the floor above. One of the many things that continues to supprise me is how small a move from one location to another can result in a significant difference. There is probably a really quiet "node" somewhere, but it would take a long time to find out. One of the other things I've learned is that if I move the thing, it can take several days to stabalize, during which time I typically see occasional big transients and I have to tweak the leveling at least once a day for a week or more before things settle down. Larry ----- Original Message ----- From: "Nick & Sophie Caporossi"To: Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 10:04 PM Subject: RE: HELP > At 09:24 AM 12/1/00 -0500, you wrote: > >The best compromise is a spot under the bedroom, but I > >have a very accurate record of when we go to bed and get up in the morning > >every day. > > > >Larry Conklin > >lconklin@............ > > > Hi Larry Conklin: > I had the same problem. I was able to reduce the ground noise considerable > by moving the sensors to the middle of the basement. It seems that the out > side walls of the house which rest on the foundation has a lot to do with > making the basement floor wiggle. The center of basement is like being in > the middle of a see-saw. > > Nick > __________________________________________________________ > > Public Seismic Network Mailing List (PSN-L) > > To leave this list email PSN-L-REQUEST@.............. with > the body of the message (first line only): unsubscribe > See http://www.seismicnet.com/maillist.html for more information. > __________________________________________________________ Public Seismic Network Mailing List (PSN-L)
Larry Cochrane <cochrane@..............>