Why are my woofers pumping?


The other day, with sunlight direct from the side, I noticed that the woofers in my speakers are pumping in and out, much more than I was aware of, when the stylus is in the groove, even between tracks (no music).  I can see it, even if I don’t hear it. Why does it happen? The woofers behave normally (no pumping) with digital music, and when the stylus it lifted from the groove, so it is not the speakers, amps, preamp or phono stage. 

I’ve read that the typical reason for woofer pumping is that the cartridge / arm resonance is too low.  I tested, with my Hifi News test record, and yes, the lateral test puts the resonance at 7 hz or so – too low (but I’ve seen some doubts about the results from that test record).  It is strange, since the combo I use – Lyra Atlas cartridge and  SME V arm (on a Hanss T-30 player) is supposed to work well. I tried to strip my arm of extras, cleaned the damping trough, etc – but it did not help much.

Anyone has an idea, why it happens, or what to do about it?  


o_holter
From a subsonic filter manufacturer:

I initially set my Low Frequency Filter switch to flat until I discovered some very amazing facts.There exists a phenomenon called woofer pumping aka woofer excursion. Frequencies below 20Hz are usually not able to be reproduced, and with the exception of synthesizers and pipe organs, are not a wanted part of the audio spectrum. This is especially troublesome with phono systems, since many of the vinyl discs you treasure (or wish to transcribe to CD) will be warped to some degree. Any warp in a vinyl disc will cause large outputs in the subsonic region, typically well below 20Hz. For example, a 33 1/3 RPM album with a single warped section will create a signal in the pickup at 0.55 Hz (33.3 RPM / 60 = 0.555 Hz). This is a signal that will cause significant cone movement, but is undesirable in the extreme. Not only will vented subs be completely unable to handle such a signal linearly, but sealed subs will also be stressed. Large amounts of available power will be wasted trying to reproduce a signal that was never intended to be there in the first place. To be effective, a subsonic filter has to be very steep - this allows all wanted frequencies to get through, and rejects those that will only cause problems. Note that my Citation 1 Pre-Amp's subsonic filter is set at 15Hz. http://sound.westhost.com/project99.htm

It happens regardless of the vinyl record, it seems. It is not mainly a matter of warp or off-centred records.
Your cartridge has a compliance value that is too high for your arm.

You could reduce the effective mass. That can be done with different weights on the counterbalance (a heavier weight, closer to the fulcrum), lower mass arm or a lighter cartridge. If you are using a cartridge shim, I would replace it for one that is lighter. 
There’s nothing you can do. It's normal. SME V has already a very low effective mass of 9.5g.

Lyra is a very heavy cartridge at almost 12 grams. It’s compliance is 12 at 100Hz, so probably 21-23 at 10Hz.

Just live with it and when the stylus wears out get something else.

Whatever you do, don't get a subsonic filter, unless of course you want to kill good sound.