D

dlaloum

Audioholic Chief
I prefer the ultrasonic approach because the vibration of the water molecules help loosen and lift dirt out of the grooves. I dont like the idea of using chemicals because of residue.
Even the ultrasonic methods work best with some added surfactant in the water...
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Do you have the 22L model? Was just looking at the Amazon ads for various sizes and had a chuckle at the descriptions of "mental cleaning" and "mental apparatus"
 
D

dlaloum

Audioholic Chief
Do you have the 22L model? Was just looking at the Amazon ads for various sizes and had a chuckle at the descriptions of "mental cleaning" and "mental apparatus"
Don't remember how many L - it can clean 5 or 6 records at a time.... which is sometimes handy... (I made it myself about 10 years back)
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Don't remember how many L - it can clean 5 or 6 records at a time.... which is sometimes handy... (I made it myself about 10 years back)
I was looking at 3db's Vevor unit....or is yours also described that way on Amazon!?
 
m. zillch

m. zillch

Audioholic
If anyone happens to know where I can buy a "shower cap for the record label area" mentioned earlier, please let me know. That would be handy for my kitchen sink cleaning process.. . . Although I never fully submerge the LP I find I still inadvertently get swater drops on the paper so I'm currently blotting it dry immediately after treatment. So far so good but it would make the job easier.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
I have never washed an LP.

As I keep telling the solution is the Dust Bug.



And Dust Bug.

 
m. zillch

m. zillch

Audioholic
I used a dust bug in the 60/70s but was annoyed that it never tracked nicely with the play stylus. It always moved inward too quickly if I recall. Also I never carefully analyzed the situation but theoretically having any object scraping along the top surface during play could potentially cause a noise which travels to the pickup stylus. Heck, if you yell at your record surface during the play of a silent groove simply the vibration or your human voice vibrating the record surface can be detected!

There are some rock groups who attend the cutting of their record and during the lead-out groove they all gather around the cutting lathe and yell at the laquer surface: "Thank you for buying our record!" and that shows up (faintly) in the pressings we buy.

Anyone have an example of that they can link us to? I'll search for one later.
 

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