I have Isoacoustics on most of my equipment and speakers and those washing machine rubber isolators on my amps. Until now, I’ve never heard of Silent Running Audio, but maybe they have something for my eighty pound amplifiers.
Background vibration and your system.
I have been interested in vibration and its effect on my audio system for probably forty years. I remember getting some platforms with inner tubes that had to be pumped up with a bicycle pump very early on. Well, I think they may have helps a little... but pumping them up drove me crazy. Since them I have used pucks of all kinds, and Black Diamond Racing composite platforms and cones, springs, and the best has been the Silent Running Audio Ohio Class vibration platform that I had made specifically for my Linn LP12... which was well worth the price.
I used to be a geologist. So, I have wanted to get a seismograph for a long time. About a year ago I purchased one. It is on the Raspberry Shake network with thousands of others. They have confirmed the correlation between times of day and remote events being transmitted into the house. Evenings and especially Sunday nights tend to be the quietest. I have seen thunder claps, cars and trucks driving by being recorded as well as not too hard footfalls on my concrete floor.
On the map below, you can see the Pacific Northwest. Each icon is a seismograph that can be viewed. The red dots are small earthquakes which can be seen and correlated with the recording of any of the seismograph by clicking on a red dot and then the seismograph. This page has a tremendous amount of different functions if you just explore it.
I recommend folks that are interested, move around the map and find one close to your house. You may be surprised how much activity there is.
https://stationview.raspberryshake.org/#/?lat=45.65013&lon=-122.52066&zoom=8.511