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really dirty old classical albums I was pulling out of the crackhouse at a buck each.
When my daughter and I do a Spin Clean session (having two people makes it a breeze), we have several cloths in rotation. She spins, I dry and the wet cloths get thrown in the nearby dryer to be reused later in the same session. Assembly line!Paul
Where your thinking comes up short is the really dirty albums with grit stuck in the grooves, the 'pops' on a really dirty album. I think the vacumn , (and steaming) is required to dislodge and pickup this grit. A good soak just doesn't do it.
In an engineering point of view, even I don't have spin clean, I think it should outperform any expensive auto rotating one, submerge an object in liquid is the most thorough cleaning you can do on anything, that's why we put our clothes in the washer, and not wet vacuum them.
designed to be brushed while fluid is applied then vacuumed. Just submerging as you suggest is not going to 'cut it'
Unfortunately submerge, brush/scrub then dry works better than wet vac
Hey Paul, what age is you daughter? My son (oldest) is 11 and i'll let him 'lift' the tonearm at the end of an lp, yet i haven't brought any of my kids into the cleaning process. . . . I am impressed. Jim
Vacuum sure sounds fancy and expensive, and classy. Unfortunately submerge, brush/scrub then dry works better than wet vac