He's gotten every answer there is and I don't find fault with most of them (although I don't think most of the fixes will work well enough to really solve the problem). It's up to the OP to pick a fix and implement it, not keep searching for repeats of the same answers...I'd do a search on the net to see what most people have done to solve the problem.
Wow!!! After going back and reading all the postings, I'd just throw the washer to the curb and get a toploader. Let's see, you are going to have porch swing springs added to it, Isolation pads under it, a two ton piece of steel bolted to the floor with cattle pads, foam and concrete on top of that and God knows what else has been suggested. THis sounds like the grounds for a new show on Discovery Channel...Extreme Home Repairs
I'd do a search on the net to see what most people have done to solve the problem. Here is one site that has Bosch machines with problems and fixes http://www.fixya.com/support/bosch/washing_machines
It's common knowledge (or should be - for salesmen at least), and most second floors don't qualify.
Update for those of you who may use this thread as future research:
Just a side note to those who were in the re-enforce the structure camp:
One thing I left out from my original posts by mistake is that the washer is directly over a 30' steel I-Beam used as one of the main structures of the house (custom home). The load is transferred through steel supports into the foundation walls. Improving the substructure wouldn't have done anything in this scenario unfortunately.
I suspect that either we had a bad Bosch washer that was deemed okay by the quality control group at Bosch or all Bosch washers shake like ours did.
