Is it the Windex?


When I first got back into this hobby I started buying used LP's from the dealer across the street. Very nice guy starting his own store. Prices seemed reasonable, quality was OK. I got some very nice stuff.

Over the past 2 years LP's have risen from a "usual" $3-7.99 to $7 - 15. I've also noticed that whether they're described as near mint or VG++ they have continuous pops and ticks even after I clean them with L'Art du Son and Disc Doctor Quick Wash Record Cleaner on my VPI 16.5.

Though I can hear crisp grooves on the better discs the popcorn noise drives me nuts.

Lately, I've notice he stands behind the counter cleaning records with Windex and paper towels. Is he doing something with that that trashes the records beyond redemption?

I've made up my mind to quit buying from him altogether, though he's the nicest guy in the world. The stuff I get from E*bay and Goodwill cleans up better.

Any thoughts?
joe_in_seattle

Showing 1 response by mechans

Again propably not the windex,. He doesn't do a proper preclean/wash ala Allsop type wet and scrubbing out the grooves. The usual soft scrub with a more volitile solution will not remove settled petrified deposits in, particular molds, and just any other dried debris.
The soft scrub brush and copiuos rinses will have an effect in my experience. Therefore a generous soaking with a sronger detergent and numerous somewhat firm scrubbs should dislodge debis and fungi. Fungicidal detergents should put that question to bed. The rinse clean is clean to get off the residum soap other noxious chemical and fluid maintaing agents et allis. Residuim is should be removed repetatively using vacuum suction very high power counter with an extremly high torque engine like about thevstrentght of a tractor pull and Nasa wind tunnel suction. This cleaning step is the needed element.
If that fails boil the record for 48 hours min. in a clamp in a pressure cooker at 1k lbs per inch square, but the clamped to avoid warpages and the disc emerges perfectly straight, the grooves will remain on occasion .
THEN get a large colony of the rare emerald green fugus eating Madacasar ants. Apply to the record use a special class 4 biohazard room for this. You must be encolosed in a copletely sealed space type suit. The ants use the record groove dirt fungus as a favored food source, you can get a license for them but you will need years of training. If they get out not even African kller bees can match the extra large but less than needle thin muderously razor sharp pincers which they use to suck the bees dry and very dead, in microseconds.
You will not stop them if that happens or all of mankind will disapear in less than a day. Try to get anything alive out. They will not eclude anything including you. Thus pull the red strap on the emergency packet. As I said these ants will remove the fungus. You won't be troubled by crispy crunchy vinyl again. Or any sound we are sure of. the red pull tag triggers a small nuclear device but its only a risk benefit analysis.
If you are particular, generally speaking clean all oy your records everyday and use an anhydrous ETOH to dry them. Or 10 complete cleanings using a Kieth Monks type RCM will do it.
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