Do equipment stands have an impact on electronics?


Mechanical grounding or isolation from vibration has been a hot topic as of late.  Many know from experience that footers, stands and other vibration technologies impact things that vibrate a lot like speakers, subs or even listening rooms (my recent experience with an "Energy room").  The question is does it have merit when it comes to electronics and if so why?  Are there plausible explanations for their effect on electronics or suggested measurement paradigms to document such an effect?
agear
Further to the speaker room interface I wonder if my room, being an Art Noxon design intended to be sound isolating (i.e with bass traps and damping built into the walls) may be less conducive to a SS type "grounding" arrangement in so far as the excess energy has no easy path to ground and hence causes problems in the room. 

Geoff's point about speaker induced floor borne vibration affecting the sound of the cables is certainly very well taken, isolating my main (30') interconnect run on Shunyata supports (springs again - actually rubber bands) had a profound effect

One thing I did not get with the Townshend supports was a reduction in bass transmission outside the room. Bass is the one sound that leaks out to my wife in the room above and it seems it does so via the window surround rather than the floor, floor would probably be the path for leakage down but as the room is at the ground level this is not relevant. I suppose SS would not recommend their setup for speakers in a high rise 😏
Depending on room nodes? Huh? What on Earth are you referring to?
Not anything to worry about with your Walkman.....
Huh? As Townshend points out on his web site, and as I’ve pointed out as well, isolating the speakers has two advantages:

(1) it prevents low frequency vibration from getting up into the speakers and affecting wiring and electronics, RCA connectors, etc. and (2) it prevents speaker cabinet vibrations from feeding back via the floor to system cabling on the floor, electronics, turntable, CD player, what have you. That’s also, by no coincidence, what my springs do for medium-size speakers and Subwoofers.
All theoretical advantages only.  Again, the raison d'etre of this thread.  
Further to the speaker room interface I wonder if my room, being an Art Noxon design intended to be sound isolating (i.e with bass traps and damping built into the walls) may be less conducive to a SS type "grounding" arrangement in so far as the excess energy has no easy path to ground and hence causes problems in the room.
That is an interesting question.  What does Art use for dampening again?  My hunch is it would work just fine as demonstrated by the video of an 18 inch sub fed 1400 watts and spitting out 104dB.  I know people who use Sistrum racking with rooms like yours.  That would be a question for Robert.    

My room is a hybrid design in that sense.  I have greenglue sandwiches of drywall floating on an isolation clip system engineered by Cascade Audio on the external walls and ceiling along with spray foam insulation for noise reduction purposes.  Corners and waveguide elements use sand and/or foam insulation.  The internal walls use the SS constructs only.