I just got back into the wax after a few decades away. This go around I have much better to play with than I did before.
Something that strikes me hard is the fact that no matter how I clean the record there is always a persistent campfire in the background. Of course, records can have a range of quality but some of the very best I have are like honey to the ears but in the silent spots and in between tracks there's that damn crackling.
I can't imagine people with 100k tied up in audio gear still deal with that.
I've tried the cleaning kit provided by Fluance which is dry and also a wet kit with velvet brush found here:
Big Fudge
Is there a problem with my cartridge? Is this normal? I thought vinyl had the ability to be silent. I can't believe you need to use an $800 cleaning machine before listening to anything.
I've also heard some death defyinging remarkable vinyl rips from 45's that are damn near high res digital.
The biggest issue with the vinyl LPs is that they are intolerant of even the most trivial abuse by their owners. The worst news about this is that once an LP becomes noisy it is difficult to improve matters, and very often impossible. It is possible to care for vinyl. I built up a large vinyl collection from 1954 to the 1980s or so when the CD took over. I have very few of these LPs that can be considered in any way noisy. Most play as quiet as a CD. So it is appropriate to review care.
The most important thing is to NEVER touch the playing surface.
Next, as soon as you remove a disc from its jacket, play it and return it to the jacket right after play.
Keep the jacket and inner sleeve in good condition.
When placing the record in its sleeve, make sure the sleeve opening is a 90 degrees to the jacket opening.
In this way it is very unlikely dust will accumulate on the disc.
If it should then you can treat with a good recommended record brush. A word of warning, most are harmful. I use the Hunt EDA brush. If you use a brush, apply it lightly to the disc, and make sure you have it orientated correctly, and as the record rotates pull it to the outside of the disc and not the inside.
Now, the best device for keeping your discs in good condition is the Cecil E Watts Dust Bug. Cecil Watts was a brilliant engineer, who used an electron microscope to study vinyl discs for playing deformation and fouling. His bristles and brush was carefully designed to remove dirt from the deepest parts of the groove. Do not use the antistatic fluid though.
These units quite often come up on eBay.
That is one of my Dust Bugs. I never play a disc without the Dust Bug.
If all else fails then you can try a cleaning machine. However you need a high end one and not a cheap one. Most will make matters worse.
This project system is about the cheapest I could recommend. However there is no cleaning machine that will return a noisy LP to pristine condition.