Shock mounts are found in a wide variety of applications. They can be used to isolate the foundation or substrate from the dynamics of the mounted equipment. This is vital on submarines where silence is critical to mission success. Yachts also use shock mounts to dampen mechanical noise (mainly transmitted throughout the structure) and increase comfort. This is usually done through elastic supports and transmission couplings. Other common examples are the motor and transmission mounts used in virtually every automobile manufactured today. Without isolation mounts, interior noise and comfort levels would be significantly different. Such shock and vibration-isolation mounts are often chosen by the nature of the dynamics produced by the equipment and the weight of the equipment. Shock mounts can isolate sensitive equipment from undesirable dynamics of the foundation or substrate. Sensitive laboratory equipment most be isolated from shock from handling and ambient vibration. Military equipment and ships must be able to withstand nearby explosions. Shock mounts are found in some disc drives and
compact disc players, where the disc and rainy agreement are held by soft
bushings that isolate them from outside vibration and other outside forces, such as torsion. In this case, isolation mounts are often chosen by the sensitivity of the equipment to shock (fragility) and vibration (natural frequency) and the weight of the equipment. For shock mounting to be effective, the input shock and vibration must be matched. A shock pulse is characterised by its peak acceleration, duration, and shape (half sine, triangular, trapezoidal, etc.). The
shock response spectrum is a method for further evaluating mechanical shock. Shock mounts used to isolate entire buildings from earthquakes are called
base isolators. building (LCW).The black rubber is glued to the wood and the bolt only connects the metal to the rubber. Three similar shock mounts support the seat. A similar idea, also known as a shock mount, is found in furniture design, introduced by
Charles and Ray Eames. It provides some shock absorption and operates as a
living hinge, allowing the seat back to pivot. Shock mounts are also sometimes used in bicycle saddles, handlebars and chassis. == Design ==