This is an interesting subject and quite a difficult one to draw any generalisations in.
For what it's worth, back in the 1990s I experimented with various wall racks for my turntables and found that none of them really helped to the degree I had hoped.
The wall in question was a solid brick dividing wall and various mounting methods were tried.
Unfortunately, because I live near a fairly busy main road, these wall mounts only served to magnify and transfer the tiny movements of the wall itself to the turntable and eventually the stylus itself.
This proved especially damaging when using a turntable which featured a sprung suspension which can only cater for vertical deflections in a certain frequency band.
Anything below or above this band caused readily heard problems which were made worse by wall mounting.
Ultimately, I think whilst nothing beats a solid concrete floor, or a sold brick wall, and even if the equipment itself has some form of isolation built in, the quietness of its location is the main factor.
If your home is subjected to regular outside vibrations, the best you can do is to ameliorate some of these, but I don't know any way of eliminating them completely.