Unsolvable Woofer Pumping (Phono only)


I'm at a loss for trying to find the source of my "woofer pumping."  It's most noteworthy when playing something that is mostly/all treble, and the woofers of my Focal Aria 906s are going nuts (inaudibly, of course).  Turntable is a Debut Carbon with Ortofon 2M Blue.

Initially I was told it's an isolation problem, so I better isolated my TT, even put it right on the concrete floor to test!  Next I thought maybe a problem with the TT itself, so tried a couple others, no change.  So I figured it must be acoustic feedback, as with the TT stopped and stylus on a record, I could produce woofer pumping by tapping on certain parts of my stand...but it is also not this! I turned off my amplifier and recorded from the pre-out to a Tascam digital recorder and played that back afterwards and the pumping STILL happened! So I tried an Schiit Mani phono stage, no change in woofer pumping...I was sure it had to be my pre-amp...

So a local audiophile came over with a couple of pre-amps and we tried those.  The only time the problem went away was when the subsonic filter that one had was engaged.  So, I've ordered some Harrison Labs "FMODs" (20Hz high pass) to see if they will help.  If they do, I may order a KAB RF1 one day...but don't want to spend that much if I don't have to.
Any other ideas on what could cause this?!

tl;dr: Woofer pumping not caused by isolation, acoustic feedback, phono/preamp or a compliance issue...what's happening?!

branden_8091

Showing 2 responses by three_easy_payments

Record warp was my first reaction as well.  Is the woofer pumping worst when the tone arm is near the outer edge of the record and best as it moves close to the dead wax?
It’s sounding like this is probably "normal" performance for this table. With an entry-level table that only weighs 12 lbs, you’re not going to get the performance of a topology that costs more and is focused on design elements such as: high mass in the center of the bearing, incorporation of a low friction bearing, or effective damping that help produce low rumble and smooth operation. I don’t think a clamp is going to help. The KAB will work although many purists feel rumble filters like are sonic bandaids. It just depends on what your goals are and budget you’re willing to spend. It doesn’t sound like you want to spend much if the cost of the KAB is daunting to you.