Trying to give specific answers to turntable rack problems is foolish at best. There's just way too many variables in floors, walls, and turntables. Much better to approach the problem with general information that will help you figure out your own solution to your own particular circumstance.
A tall wood rack with a table on top is a lousy choice pretty much anywhere other than a solid concrete floor. Even then I would balk.
Lower is better because the higher the more the same vibration at the base is amplified at the top. Massive is better because if its massive enough it becomes pretty much impossible to move at anything other than subsonic frequency.
The rack is just one part of the solution. There is also the shelf, and the distribution of mass in the total rack/shelf/turntable system. So for example a tall wood rack might work okay if the shelf on top is so massive it forces the rocking motion down into a frequency range where its not so much of a problem.
You can see from all the above that what we are talking about really is tuning the entire system to filter vibrations we don't want and pass or transfer vibrations into a range where they're more benign.
Not sure if this will work in your situation, but my floor is wood and my table does rock and would never pass the water in a cup test, yet my playback is exemplary with fantastic bass and superb imaging, all because the rack I built satisfies all the above conditions.
It also costs a lot less than shipping alone will run for one of those sweet looking but not so good working wood racks.https://www.theanalogdept.com/images/spp6_pics/C_miller_web/TTstand_1.jpg
A tall wood rack with a table on top is a lousy choice pretty much anywhere other than a solid concrete floor. Even then I would balk.
Lower is better because the higher the more the same vibration at the base is amplified at the top. Massive is better because if its massive enough it becomes pretty much impossible to move at anything other than subsonic frequency.
The rack is just one part of the solution. There is also the shelf, and the distribution of mass in the total rack/shelf/turntable system. So for example a tall wood rack might work okay if the shelf on top is so massive it forces the rocking motion down into a frequency range where its not so much of a problem.
You can see from all the above that what we are talking about really is tuning the entire system to filter vibrations we don't want and pass or transfer vibrations into a range where they're more benign.
Not sure if this will work in your situation, but my floor is wood and my table does rock and would never pass the water in a cup test, yet my playback is exemplary with fantastic bass and superb imaging, all because the rack I built satisfies all the above conditions.
It also costs a lot less than shipping alone will run for one of those sweet looking but not so good working wood racks.https://www.theanalogdept.com/images/spp6_pics/C_miller_web/TTstand_1.jpg