I'm going to try to pull us away from chatgbt.
My next vinyl foible is that my records do deteriorate. I play them many times and they're perfect then they pick up ticks, skips, etc. You could say that some of that is static, but these problems on the record repeat in the same place, so it's not static, which changes depending on the weather.
I treat my records really well. If I make a mistake and drop the stylus accidentally ont the record, I remember. It doesn't even happen once a year. Of course, I try the degritter, but certain ticks and skips remain. To make things more strange, they tend to happen at the beginning and ending tracks.
One might assume that my cartridge must be misaligned. But I use a professional protractor, a battery operated scale for the cartridge weight, and the VPI Fat Boy is an excellent tone arm with all the basic adjustments, which I use. So it's all a mystery to me why my records become damaged.
One last piece of data. I have records that are more than 50 years old and which have been played on a $199 Teac with a $69 cartridge (seventies' prices) and I never changed the stylus. I wasn't aware I had to. Nor did I adjust the tonearm. I wasn't aware I had to, if it had any way to adjust it. I have so many records from back then that never picked up any damage other than groove wear.
One more strange piece of data. I picked up Jacintha's "Here's to Ben." It sounded perfect the first few plays. Then it started picking up all sorts of ticks. I think it was on soft vinyl. Somebody mentioned PVC, but I don't think records are made from the same material as PVC. I read an article by a writer who visited many different pressing plants, and he said each had its own recipe for vinyl. So vinyl is not the same thing.
I bought a Jacintha album on 180 gram vinyl and it picked up all sorts of noise. When I used the Degritter most of the noise went away, but the last band was scratched somehow. I bought the same album and it scrathed in the same place. I don't remember anything happening to either record.
Vinyl strangeness.