Turntable Causes Speaker Cones To Excessively Move Rapidly


I have a Technics 1200G turntable, Luxman 595, and I use MM carts. For some reason, when I play my turntable I see my sub woofer cone (REL sub) and my Focal Sopra N1 cones move violently. There is a subsonic filter on it where helps cut down on it. But I am wondering... does anyone else have this issue?

If I didn’t have the subsonic filter would the violent moving of my cones damage my speakers? I ran it for about 2 hours total of turntable music before I noticed. 

Not a issue with my streamer... they stay almost perfectly still. Just with turntable. 

dman777

More info!

 

 

 

 

 

How to Stop Woofer Pumping

Woofer “pumping” — where the speaker cone moves in and out with low‑frequency rumble — is often caused by subsonic energy (below about 20 Hz) from the turntable, room vibrations, or mechanical resonance. Here’s how to address it.

1. Use a subsonic filter
This is the most direct fix. Many preamps and phono stages have a built‑in subsonic filter (e.g., 20 Hz high‑pass) that cuts off rumble before it reaches the speakers  . If your current preamp doesn’t have one, consider adding a dedicated filter like the KAB RF‑1 or Harrison Labs FMOD (20 Hz high‑pass) . These are transparent and quiet, and can eliminate pumping without affecting music quality.

2. Improve turntable isolation
Even with a subsonic filter, poor isolation can still transmit vibrations. Use:

  • maple or solid wood turntable plinth (e.g., 2–4 inches thick) to dampen resonance  .

  • Isoblock or similar damping feet under the plinth.

  • damping mat on the plinth surface.

  • damping paddle in the cartridge’s oil bath (if applicable) to absorb arm‑cartridge resonance .

3. Check arm‑cartridge resonance
Some arm/cartridge combinations have a low‑frequency resonance (often below 8 Hz) that can excite woofer motion  . If you suspect this, test with a record that isolates the resonance frequency or use a damping paddle.

4. Optimize room and speaker placement

  • Keep the turntable away from walls and large surfaces to reduce standing waves.

  • Position speakers so they’re not directly in the path of low‑frequency sound waves.

  • If possible, move the turntable to a more isolated location (e.g., a dedicated audio rack) .

5. Consider speaker design
Ported speakers are more prone to pumping because the enclosure doesn’t damp low frequencies below the port tuning  If you can, use sealed or infinite‑baffle designs for better subsonic damping.

6. Test and verify

  • Play a test tone in the 20–30 Hz range to confirm pumping.

  • Compare with and without the subsonic filter to see the difference.

  • If pumping persists, check for structural vibrations (e.g., concrete floors, nearby heavy equipment).

Bottom line:
Start with a subsonic filter and improved turntable isolation. If the problem lingers, address arm‑cartridge resonance and room acoustics. A KAB RF‑1 or similar filter is often the quickest, most effective solution  .

Eh... it is with a Nagaoka Mp-500 cart and ortofon mm black lvb 250 cart. The tonearm is stock on the Technics 1200g. These are common carts for the Technics 1200g so I doubt it would be a mismatch. 

The turntable sits by itself on a turntable stand. 

https://imgur.com/a/EAcNcOW

Wow, this scares me. Any ideas on what else?  

 

 

Also, I get psychosomatic about my speakers. Could I have damage them already? What damage would I look for? Sometimes it feels like the base isn't as tight as it was before. But it could be in my head because I get pretty fanatical about damaging my speakers.