what to keep analoge system perfect working?


Hi,

the intent of this thread is to expand a bit more the subject on how to set the cartridge, keep it cleaned and keep your LPs in a good shape.

I came out with the following list of tools:

1) strobe disk to fine tune the speed, wherever it is possible to do so.
I was thinking of K-A-B Strobe disk that seems to be a very precise tool

2) clean off dust from the records.
At first I was impressed by the Nagaoka roller, but after researches I found it not to be as good as I though and all in all the carbon fiber brush seems to be still the classic solution for dust

3) vinyl cleaning machine.
There are several solutions out there but they are pretty expensive.
I found a DIYs to be much cheaper but yet as efficient. It just needs an old TT and a wet/dry vacuum;

3a) for the liquid fluid a diy version should work fine. Unfotunately the fluids on the market are quite of expensive and if you have a wide selection I guess this is the way to go:
- 3 parts of distilled water
- 1 part of Isopropyl alcohol
- few drops of photographic wetting agent

3b) brush for the cleaning duty.
To spread the liquid, it is supposedly better to spend few more bucks and get the VPI HW-17/17F brush than having a cheaper solution that won't least as long will start shading soon and won't be as efficient

4) keep stylus clean.
I found a very inexpensive solution for it. It is called Mr. Eraser ME. It seems to have gathered a lot of follower among all the people that have been using it for long time

5) perform cartridge alignment.
I found Mint LP to be the best custom made tool. Unfortunately it is costly. (does it also have a mirror to check the azimuth?!)

6) digital stylus force gauge

7) level to check if the platter is flat

This is what my understanding of what's needed for a perfect analogue front end set up and maintenance till now.

Please feel free to comment each point and give suggestions.

Best,
Stefano.
stefanoo

Showing 6 responses by stefanoo

sorry...I just realized that zerostat gun is not zero dust :)

I mean I just followed the recipe on internet that people have been using for years...i don't know.
The cleaning with the solution seems to be pretty neat.
I know a professional solution would probably clean better but it fun to DIY :)

I am afraid of cleaning the delicate stylus with Mr Eraser or everything...I don't know....
Hi,

thanks for your reply.
I have read a lot of information and done a lot of "homeworks" :)
I wasn't worried about the little replies although I thought this might have been an interesting thread for analogue fascinados, like everything you need to know about setting your analogue source and having the right tool with the brand's name and everything...maybe I was wrong about the interest, whatever.

Anyways it's good to know that if I won't clean the stylus after playing each side my nice $4K ZYX 4D will start playing like a $100 MM.

Now you worried me a bit about the vacuuming process and the solution I have made up. :)
I followed the recipie you can find everywhere on internet i.e.
3 parts of distilled water
1 part of ISP (I found one at 91%)
few drops of kodac photo-flow.

I also try to vacuum really carefully.

One question:

I see on DIYs cleaning machine that people put velvet on the surface contact of the tip attached to the vacuum.
When I vacuum the record I use a small transparent tube and I go from outer to the inner part.
Should I plug the opening of the tube with a small piece of velvet and vacuum with that while touching the surface of the record?
thank you very much for your response.
I will try some improvements soon to see how it works.
Unfortunately the vacuum just smoked last night and I don't why since it was supposedly a wet/dry type.
I will proabably use a normal vacuum and a bottle for recupation of the liquid part.

Thank you again Doug, your post are always high content!

I will post again when modifications to the maschine have been made.
I didn't do the rinsing part. I was assuming that washing with the solution and vacuuming would be enough.

Perhaps I will add the rinsing step with distilled water and than vacuuming again.
Sorry just one consideration/question.
I have tried to put two holes on a jar to attempt to separate liquid when sucking it off the vinyl to prevent damages to the vacuum.
Apparently it looks like the vacuum is still sucking the liquid off (part is being deposited on the jar and a good amount is still sucked off from the vacuum).
Do you guys know if there is anything (size of the tubins, lenght) I should be awared of?