Dust, such as it is present in a typical listening room, is the enemy of what? Considering that the LP is exposed for about 20 minutes per side.
Dealing with Static on LP palyback
Anyone have any suggestions on how to deal with static build up on LPs as I play them? Just playing one side is something enough to cause an arc when I pick up the album. Most of the time I hear tiny, consistent crackles that sound just like static.
All the things I tried that claim to reduce static does not. I must have four record mats and a camel hair tone arm brush, all of which claim to reduce static but have no effect that I can see.
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From my own experiences, “old audiophiles” know best. I honestly believe most oldies are covers down opinionated. There’s just no substitute for experience. 20 minutes open to dust is 20 (or more) minutes too long for me. Dust is the “enemy” of vinyl (as oldaudiophile already stated) I am with you on cover down. I personally would never want to put a record with 20 minutes of dust exposure back into a clean lined anti-static inner sleeve. |
On this topic, I beg to disagree with almost everything you say except the bit I bolded above! However, you do not need to modify any cartridge to perform your experiment - DS Audio's optical cartridges meet your requirement exactly! There are no electromagnetic generator parts. Moreover there is a wide choice of stylus / cantilever materials, from diamond / aluminium to a single diamond stylus / cantilever. My diamond / aluminium one should arrive in the next month ... |
@oldaudiophile To answer your questions - everything is grounded via 18g lamp cord. I realize one doesn't need 18g wire but I got sick and tired of the tiny ground wires always breaking and the 18G fixes that problem! All records are stored in several brands of good quality sleeves. Over the years, good quality sleeves got better, so I have several brands of "good quality" sleeves now. TT sits on a 2x4 Finland Birch plywood, over a thick carpet, sitting on a large heavy dresser-table. Other than the TT motor, there is nothing nearby to generate EMI or induce static. Unfortunately, this TT is big, it covers about half of that plywood, and no dust cover is made for it. It is on my to-do list to make one in the near future. Some folks have had resonance problems with a dust cover, some have not. With TT's in my past, I had dust covers but never had a problem. I did have a serious resonance problem when I put this TT in a cabinet with a top raising lid. It was horrible and worse with the lid down. So, it went back on top of the cabinet. I now have a different cabinet, which is just about as solid. |
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