@mijostyn, I’m not sure the problem is extrinsic. I conducted these measurements with either no speaker output or extremely low speaker output. I considered noise from mechanicals as a potential source of vibration early on in this process, so I made sure the air conditioning system wasn’t running nor were either of the refrigerator compressors in the nearby bar nor the water heater in the adjacent utility room. This doesn’t exclude sub-sonic vibrations (with associated harmonics that could creep into the audible range) occurring from outside the house, so I confirmed the integrity of the system’s isolated state by keeping the motor drive off, placing the needle on the non-turning record and observing the results on the analyzer. For an extra degree of thoroughness, I took readings both with the drive belt taken off the platter as well as installed normally. No measurable noise occurred in either of these configurations with the drive motor off. To eliminate the possibility that the drive motor itself was the culprit, I kept the motor and belt off while hand-turning the platter to a slightly faster rate than normal and allowed its inertia to slowly dissipate. The original resonance problem was observed using this method.