What isolation feet under your amp with great result?


I'm looking for more cleaner, micro inner details. Not tone control or dynamic.
Amp is 82-lb. TIA
128x128nasaman
Hockey pucks consist of vulcanized rubber.  In the audiophile world, rubber is not generally known for being a desirable footer material.  The vulcanizing process results in a rubber material with increased rigidity and durability, as well as other changes in the mechanical and electrical properties.  Many here report using hockey puck footers under their gear and speakers. Therefore, does the vulcanizing process result in a rubber material that has damping and support properties which are better than those of unvulcanized rubber footers?   
mitch2

I have no clue of the chemical or mfg processing properties of a puck.  
All I can comment on is that I'd tried several other footers in the past. 
Someone here on this forum recommended pucks to me. 
I tried them and liked them.  I sold my previous audiophile footers.
OP, suggest you research the following:

Barry Diament 
Ingress Engineering 
Townshend
Symposium
Stacore
Taiko
Machina Dynamica

For a diy solution read Barry Diament, buy Ingress cup/rollers combine with a slate or granite platform and a spring like Machina Dynamica or inner tube.

Other makes are ready made solutions that work.

Avoid rubber.

 
The vulcanized rubber hockey pucks are way harder than typical rubber footers.  Anyone else have a clue as to their damping abilities vs. other typical options discussed here? 
I would be interested in trying them under my 70-pound amplifiers, which sit on SRA platforms.  The SRA guys said it doesn't matter which footers I use when using their platforms while the amp designer strongly suggested Stillpoints so the amps are currently on Stillpoint footers over SRA platforms.  I have no sonic issues but it seems I could use the Stillpoints under some of my more sensitive front-end gear if their use under the amplifiers is redundent.
The Machina Dynamica springs mentioned above are also interesting to me and while elegant from an engineering perspective, not so much visually.  I believe these are valve springs for small engines.  The trick is finding the right spring for the weight being supported.