How to isolate turntable from footstep shake or vibration


Even while the Oracle turnable that I use has a built-in springs suspension by design there is a low or even sub-low frequency boom every time someone walks in a room. This becomes really bad with the subwoofer’s volume set high as the low frequency footsteps make straight to subwoofer where they are amplified shaking everything around. It seems the cartridge is picking up the footsteps very efficiently as even a lightest foot down becomes audioable. What can be done to attempt to isolate the turntable from the low frequency vibrations? Interesting, that the lower the volume of the subwoofer, the less the footstep shake is evident and with the subwoofer turned off it is a barely a problem at all. 
esputnix
If your floor boards run east/west, put the TT on either the north or south wall. Or vice versa. Worked for me.
I don’t use powerful subwoofers. I use a full-range speaker system that is essentially flat in-room to below 20 hZ.


No sub here too, don’t know why people use sub at home for vinyl listening, and what is the speakers if they can’t reproduce bass? Sub is for cinema (digital) or as a competition for small bookshelf speakers that can’t reproduce bass at all. 

I’m with Tannoy System 15 mkII , don’t need any sub and life is good.

@cleeds, certainly an old Sota is not going to be the quietest turntable around but a record is at least one order of magnitude noisier than that old Sota. My new one, which will hopefully show up next month is as quiet as it gets. 
I use a calibrated mic to "listen" to my system all the time. It's program has an oscilloscope function and I can plot a frequency response curve which for this purpose needs to be near field. Rumble is a constant. Record noise is not. It is also much louder than rumble. But, you do not even have to measure it. You can see it in the subwoofers excursions. 
To be short, there is plenty of noise between 3 and 12 Hz. With a flat record it is true that between 0 and 12 Hz is relatively quiet. Relatively. 
It is also true that a sub sonic filter will be useful particularly for the idler wheel drive people. For people like me who use subwoofers boosted to realistic levels subsonic filters are essential for vinyl users unless you never listen over 75 dB.  Also if you do not want to rocket your subwoofer drivers into the next county a mute switch is a nice addition.