DO NOT wash records EVER.
This was settled science three quarters of a century ago, when Cecil E. Watts published his careful scientific studies using an electron microscope.
He found that washing LPs with ANY fluid forced the dirt into the deep part of the groove and made the discs noisier. He had remarkable photographs from the electron microscope to prove it.
I have provided you with a Cecil E. Watts Dust Bug. This was carefully designed by him as a result of his exhaustive scientific study of the problem.
If you are going to use liquids then you need a powerful vacuum record cleaner.
Keith Monks have always been the industry leader in this technology.
I have never washed an LP. The only noise in any of my records is the noise they came with.
Don't touch the grooves. Store records with the sleeve opening covered by the jacket. Use the Cecil E. Watts Dust Bug for every play.
Play records covered not open. Get a record out, play it and return it to the jacket, and replace vertically in the shelf. Do not play in dusty environments.
Ideally all records should be played covered, which is why all my turntables are in cabinets.
In the early days such as when my 301s were built, and even my Thorens TD 150 which is a low serial number came without plinths. The purchaser was expected to mount it in a cabinet, and did.
The only turntable I have ever had on a plinth is my Thorens TD 125 Mk II. Even so that is in a cabinet.