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
@mijostyn Very interesting.  I don't have any equipment to drive a subwoofer yet, just good old fashion two channel stuff.  A subwoofer will be something to look into in the future possibly!
@lewm I'm just itching to audition some speakers now! Ha ha. I was more asking if a more full range speaker would be about equal to adding a subwoofer now? I'm currently not able to have a subwoofer...and still my heart prefers old fashion two channel setups.
Is there an airport near you??   I had this happen to me years ago...radar interaction I was told...   I had the electrician drop another ground wire....went away.
Branden, I have heard some very incredible systems using small stand mount speakers with subwoofers. You do not need any more than a two channel system to run subwoofers. The amps and crossovers are usually built in. Sure, if you are itching to get new speakers go for it. Focal's aere not shabby loudspeakers and to get a floor stander of that quality will cost a lot. I am an old fashioned two channel guy. Each of two channels has two subwoofers attached to it and my speakers are 7 feet 10 inches tall.
Newbee, cartridge tonearm mismatches can cause a lot of trouble but not like this. If the tonearm is too light the system will feed back when the right base note comes along. If the tone arm is too heavy the tonearm will start shaking when the right warp comes along and can even fly up into the air. When you are about to replace a worn out cartridge start adding pennies to the head shell and see what happens. Oil damping will do absolutely nothing for this problem as the cartridge is doing exactly what it is supposed to be doing, picking up vibration. It is not shaking, jumping off the record or feeding back. Do this. Take your speaker covers off. Put the stylus in any run out groove and turn the volume all the way up. Now look at your woofer dance. 
@stringreen Interesting.  There is one about 15km away...I will try a 'cheater cord' to ground to my house rather than to the pre-amp's grounding point.
@mijostyn I was unaware...I thought subs were generally un-powered. I may be trying out some Harbeth speakers this weekend. Quite excited for that. I went to a few hi-fi shops around today and talked to them about this...have a few more things to try so I hope it is solved!!