It's a serious point. In the motor industry the classic solution to unwelcome harmonic vibration is to bolt on a big weight, prefereably a laminated weight of sheets of steel and rubber. Have a look underneath any Land Rover and you'll find a couple.
Check that the concrete weight attached to the drum is firmly attached. Then consider adding more weight to the machine, for example in the shape of a heavy pedestal on an absorbing material.
I'm surprised that a Miele would do that, every Miele I have seen is very quiet and steady when spinning, so much so that even when you stand a coin on the machine it doesn't move.
No fault of the Miele - it's the fault of our wooden floor - simply not designed to effectively support a machine spinning 15lbs of wet washing at 1,500 rpm! There's an interesting video here -
Here's an analogy to try and explain the phenominum better -
if you were to take hold of a large bag of shopping and spin it around you in a circular motion you are going to stay reasonably level. Then repeat the task standing on a trampoline . . . it's the energy produced by the centrifugal force created that will cause the problem.
Always check your neighbours are aware of testing - shopping bags travelling at high velocity can injure or kill.
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