What do you do with your old LP's that don't meet your quality standards.


I took my Thorens TD160 that I bought new in 1976 into the shop for a $400.00 tuneup. New power cord, belt, grease, Grado Red 1 Cartridge, and overall inspection. 
It sat for about 20 years as I was playing CD's.
I went through my 400 albums and was able to pick out about 75 of them that met my high standard of condition. Back in the 70's taking care of your vinyl wasn't a priority. Before playing any of them I cleaned them with 2 Spin Clean systems, 1 with the cleaner and the other as a wash with distilled water. I then used a vinyl vac on a lazy Susan type revolving thing that I had glued a 3/4" piece of plywood with a 1/4" bolt epoxyed in the center. Worked great.
I was going to throw out the 325 bad albums but then contacted a guy that runs a little 2nd hand record store here in Milwaukee called Off The Beaten Path. I gave them to him for free, just asked for a small store credit after he goes through them all.
Next day he posted a picture of all of them on Facebook in the back of his van. He even closed his store the next day to start pricing them.
The picture kind of gave me a tear or two.
Then the following day he started posting pictures of them. That really hit me, brought back so many memories of a time long ago.
In the end I'm really happy that some of them will find a happy home.
He told me that I would be surprised how many younger people really don't care about the shape that the albums are. They just want to get into vinyl and listen to the music they grew up with listening to what their parents played.
Bottom line, I feel really good that I didn't throw them in the trash.
golden210

Showing 1 response by sammmmmmy

"The ones that don’t pass my audio/visual test, are put in their jackets,,and cracked in half and put in trash."


You break them in half because it makes your blood boil to have someone come upon - and benefit - from those lps which you worked so hard to get.
You're resentful of another's good fortune.

This filthy practice reminds me of a scene in Zweig's "Vinyl" documentary:

A collector of punk has to move to a tiny ,cramped apt. and there is no room for his formidable record collection.
He cannot sell to a used record store cos its the '80s and records are deemed worthless.
And he is unwilling to simply give them away - likely some novice will luck-out and the collection that took years to amass will go to some snot-nose.

He HAS to throw them out. But because he is resentful of another's luck, instead of putting up a "free records" sign or ad, he goes to the bother of
locating a alley where there is a bin and ,making sure there is no one about, he dumps his boxes of vinyl. 

He admits that he dumped 2000 lps in a dumpster so that they would "ever
belong only to me."

After the disheartened fellow has gone, Zweig keeps his hidden camera running. Sure enough ,in next to no time, a black guy hops into the bin and ,with a wide grin, proceeds to load-up.