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I use an old turntable, lay down enough fluid so that I have a about an 1/8 of an inch of liquid in front of the brush. I go and forth 3 times around the entire LP and then run my finger over the brush in the sink, and then take off the excess fluid. I ...
Romy,What do you propose as an efficient and non-detremental cleaning method?
Hi All,Romy, are you suggesting that Disc Doctor Record Cleaner is detrimental to our vinyl, or that Groove-Glide is the culprit? Also do you feel that the record cleaning products such as Nitty Gritty's Pure 2 is sufficient with my Nitty Gritty Record Cleaning machine?Thanks very much.Rich Nelridge
Pretty basic but effective: Disc Doctor system for deep cleaning, store in new anti-static poly or poly lined paper sleeves, Nagaoka CL-152 before play, and if the humidity mandates an Audioquest anti-static brush once over.Bob AHere's a link to a Japanese site showing the Nagaoka CL-152. http://www.otaiweb.com/player/acce.htmlI've seen these go for between $80 and $115 on eBay.....Gesh -:(
Has anyone tried anything like Last's record preservative treatment? Last is reputed to be what it claims to be by a number of highly experienced credible vinylophiles, apparently what it does isn't a coating, but rather an alteration of the surface molecular structure (hardening)OTOH if one is scrupulous about properly wet cleaning their vinyl initially and then place the LP in a quality poly lined sleeve and thereafter always use an Audioquest brush for every side before and after, cleans his stylus regularly and replaces it before it's seriously worn etc, and NEVER replays a side repeatedly without allowing 2 to 24 hour for the vinyls memory to recover it's originaldimensions, your vinyl will outlast you, the LAST just add's a secondary or additional protective safety factor."While I find the quality of new vinyl is heaps better than it used to be in my record-buying heyday (late 70's & 80's) I suspect the plastic used may be softer. My new records seem to pick up wear & tear much more easily than mint second-hand ones I've bought. Perhaps a chemist can tell me if vinyl hardens with age?
One reason that I am not a vinyl guy is the way an audiophile in college played his albums.He used some kind of Kodak photgraphic fluid to wet the entire record and rested a 3 o4 4 inch brush across all the tracks...not for cleaning, but for playing each and every LP. After the LP played he set it against the wall to dry. The concept was that this way the LPs never even got dirty. The solution was supposedly practically residue-free (I am sure ther is always some residue) and did not harm the vinyl. I s ...
Hiya;The VPI is a manual machine so you have to apply the fluid and clean the record by hand and then use the vacuum to suck the debris off.I'm lazy so use a Nitty Gritty which is fully automatic.Put the record on, pump some fluid, scrub, vacuum.A record is cleaned and ready to play in under 5 minutes.Both machines are very effective.And NOISY.Only real vinyl fanatics do a hand clean then a machine clean and fuss about with pre-washes, post wash rinses and other laborious rituals. ...