cause of the pumping woofer is rumble and it's inherited to vinyl playback. there is inevitable friction between tip of the stylus and groove walls while playing. additionally if your stylus is worn out it can reach the bottom of the groove and cause more rumble.
on the other hand turntable, tonearm and cartridge quality plays a major role on rumble but unfortunately you can not totally eliminate it. you can only lower it to an acceptable level. people who are saying that there is absolutely no rumble on their turntable are either not aware of the existence of an embedded rumble filter on their phono preamp which can not be turned off or don't have a speaker that can go below 40Hz.
in order to lower rumble to an acceptable level you need a much better turntable and tonearm than the ones you mentioned.
on the other hand turntable, tonearm and cartridge quality plays a major role on rumble but unfortunately you can not totally eliminate it. you can only lower it to an acceptable level. people who are saying that there is absolutely no rumble on their turntable are either not aware of the existence of an embedded rumble filter on their phono preamp which can not be turned off or don't have a speaker that can go below 40Hz.
in order to lower rumble to an acceptable level you need a much better turntable and tonearm than the ones you mentioned.