Branden, the woofers in any speaker including subwoofers will still dance to the rumble but with a larger driver in a sealed cabinet it will be much less noticeable at moderate volumes anyway. All records have some rumble built in. You may notice that some records are worse than others.
You would have to have a damaged turntable or an old idler wheel drive for it to rumble that bad. For all of us the only way to keep our main speakers clean is to divert everything under about 100 Hz to subwoofers.
For those of us with two way or one way loudspeakers this is actually critically important even if you do not use a turntable as low bass will Doppler distort everything else the woofer or speaker is trying to reproduce. For those who do not know what Doppler distortion is just have a friend drive by you at 40 MPH leaning on the horn. As the car passes you the horn will change tone. It will go from high to low. That is exactly what is happening when the woofer is flapping back and forth at low frequencies.
You would have to have a damaged turntable or an old idler wheel drive for it to rumble that bad. For all of us the only way to keep our main speakers clean is to divert everything under about 100 Hz to subwoofers.
For those of us with two way or one way loudspeakers this is actually critically important even if you do not use a turntable as low bass will Doppler distort everything else the woofer or speaker is trying to reproduce. For those who do not know what Doppler distortion is just have a friend drive by you at 40 MPH leaning on the horn. As the car passes you the horn will change tone. It will go from high to low. That is exactly what is happening when the woofer is flapping back and forth at low frequencies.