Record cleaning



After reading The Audiophile Man feature on vinyl cleaning wondering what Audiogoners think of his DIY cleaning solution (distilled water and alcohol solution with 7% alcohol). This is used as the cleaning solution in a Disco-Antistat record cleaner. Before placing the album in the disco-antistat,he brushes on a solution of a surfactant and glycol. After running album through the disco-antistat he then vacuums the residue with a RCM.

I was wondering if I could apply a solution of surfactant and glycol to an album with a stiff goat hair brush, then run it through just the US cycle of my HumminGuru US cleaner. Then rinse with distilled water by applying it on the album while on the Record Dr. using a second stiff brush to clean into the grooves, then vacuuming the residue up through the Record Dr?

thegreenline

I’ve really simplified my method over the years. I currently use a 40khz, stainless steel tank. Distilled water with 8 drops tergikleen per gallon. After cleaning, take lp to my sink and rinse well with distilled water, let it dry on my Vinyl Stack spinner. Works for me.

I second rhg3's recommendation!  Reading Neil Antin's Precision Aqueous Cleaning of Vinyl Records-3rd Edition - The Vinyl Press is not an easy read but well worth the time!

I have not included alcohol, thus far, in any of my record cleaning solutions.  However, using the correct amount or proportion of the right type of alcohol in a proper record cleaning solution, using the proper cleaning technique, is not, I believe, harmful to PVC records.  Based upon my understanding of what I've read and researched on the topic, thus far, I also believe that a little alcohol might, indeed, be necessary to clean extremely soiled records.  Many pre-made solutions include some amount of alcohol and surfactant.

Last I read a piece written by The Audiophile Man, Paul Rigby, I believe he is using the Degritter US machine now.  My understanding is that the HumminGuru is nice but limited by its power (i.e.  wattage and cleaning frequency).  Regardless, I am currently using a similar over-the-counter US machine in my cleaning regimen incorporating the use of a Disco Anti-Stat and have done an A/B cleaning comparison with the original Degritter.  The audio quality results rendered on the 3 or 4 albums that I used were, effectively, the same.  Despite this, I am still considering the purchase of the newest Degritter machine because it is so much more convenient (i.e.  considerably less labor intensive) than my current lash-up regimen.  Maybe it'll be a Christmas present to myself this year.   

As @noromance asked, how dirty are your records?

If you’re in this for the long haul with vinyl playback, I’d strongly recommend investing in an ultrasonic record cleaning machine. Everything else—manual cleaning, vac-based systems, multi-step processes works, but it’s labor-intensive and eventually feels like a chore. Ultrasonic cleaning saves a ton of time, gives far more consistent results, and makes the whole record-care routine something you barely have to think about.

It’s one of the best long-term quality-of-life upgrades you can make for a vinyl collection. I picked one (Degritter) up earlier this year, and I honestly can’t believe I didn’t do it sooner. The convenience and consistency are on a completely different level.

Any one have experience with Record Restore solutions by Secret Chord Analogue? Curious how that might compare with the options being listed. 

Hi,

Regarding "Reading Neil Antin's Precision Aqueous Cleaning of Vinyl Records-3rd Edition - The Vinyl Press is not an easy read but well worth the time!"

 

I disagree.  Having skimmed most of the document, I agree that a novice can, simultaneously, glean excellent ideas as well as get lost in the forest.  

For me - The bottom line is that the author does a great deal of scientific work, only to undermine this by relying on subjective and relative impressions of the most minor of variations in mythology - especially what water should be used.

That being said, this document can easily make 'believers' out of many...

Again, keep it simple until you find you need to go further - running water (tap) flushes of macro-items, followed by a wash (Spin Clean, Vac Machine, clean sponge etc.), followed by a second running water flush, and finally a 'pure' water rinse (DI or distilled are ~$1.00 to $2.00 per gal. at the grocery store). I found that a second Spin-Clean works well for the final rinse step.

Good luck, and exchange hours of reading for giving your LP collection a good cleaning.