Best rack for non-suspension turntable?


I have a Well-Tempered Classic turntable. For those unfamiliar, it does not have any internal suspension.

Does anyone have an opinion about the best type of equipment rack for this kind of table? My options are the Naim Fraim (I have Naim electronics, but the Fraim is obscenely expensive) which is rigid with glass shelves or the Isoblue which is composed of layers of different woods (so I'm told).

The Fraim supposedly is unbeatable with a suspension table like an LP12, but I'm not sure how it would work with a non-suspended table.

Any opinions?
turboglo
Go for SolidSteel Table.
They are decoupled with cones and you can adjust the top Plate.
For a complete description of the 300lb plus Turn Table Stand for the new Goldmund Reference II TT System hit this link !!

Thanks to Neil for digging into the archives (Nsgarch)
You were right about my thoughts maybe too much vino that night 4 me Yes?

Goldmund blog

Listening to
Ian Gomm - Albion Records Ariole 202 230-320 German Pressing
Garebear, if the resonances are truly being effectively channeled out and external influences isolated, the sonic result should be more harmonically rich as the crud is removed to reveal the real sound. Any true upgrade, as opposed to a juggling of colorations, should have this effect, ie. less hash and grunge/more natural detail. In my experience this does not usually translate as brighter unless natural brightness is being masked. Even then it is not aggressively brighter, just more revealing.
The big problem for the super-rigid or super-massive schools of TT isolation is that the continuous motion of the Earth's crust (and other sources of low freq. vibration such as traffic) forces the building's foundation and structure to shake, shake, shake. Unless the TT is decoupled from the structure/foundation, the TT is susceptible to low freq. vibration, even when placed on super-massive or super-rigid platforms.

Geoff Kait, Machina Dynamica
OK

You guys have me convinced in everything but spending the money. I am going to buy a big peice of granite or slate (as has been highly recommended by TW Acustic) stone and then sandwich it between 3 bike tubes and my current granite/composite shelf. I am then going to use the right amount of sorbothane to couple the shelves to my rack. This should do the trick. I have a bike pump for maintenance & leveling every 2 weeks. Should save me $3500 as the new Minus K for the big heavy tables costs about $4000. Thanks Nsgarch for the Panda link. This all makes sense & now I have money for camp tuition for this summer.