Record cleaner


Hi!

What's good record cleaner at the top end and mettle class, I want one where there is as little maintains as possible, just put the record and then it´s clean.

My wife wont do it?

Regards
daemon
Record cleaning, alas, takes time. You need to wet the record, use a proper cleaning device, for me that is a Disk Doctor pad with some cleaner on it, give it a good scrub, about 3 or 4 times around, then put it on a machine, for me that is a Loricraft 3. Then repeat with a different disk doctor pad and some very purified water, not distilled, to rinse, and repeat at least once maybe twice.
There may be something like what you want but I have not seen one, only heard about it, it uses sound and liquid to clean the records, but the ad was in Chinese and my ability to read and write is limited to English.
why would you prefer purified water as oposed to distilled water? any pros or cons? I've been using distilled water because I thought it would have very little if any bacteria (something that is undesireable).
This thread and many others that I have read indicate that distilled water is not what should be used.
I don't kmow much but I do know a little about water treatment. I do it for a living, working for "Imagination at Work". Distilled would be preferred over demineralized or deionized or simple filter purified water. Assuming receiving vessels, transfer lines, along with any final storage containers en route to you are "clean"...this will have the lowest mineral content. Distillation basically evaporates water leaving behind all dissolved solids (mineral species) and suspended solids (particulates). Then the water as steam or vapor is condensed back to liquid form. Multi stage distillation improves the quality of product water (same applies to good vodka and product ethanol). Deionization - particularly when done with resins - can result in a water that is highly contaminated with microorganisms. Resin beds do tend to become microbiologically fouled over time. There are more exotic demineralization and filtration processes that can provide a high quality/reduced mineral content water (e.g., RO) - but from an accessibility/reliability/purity point of view - distilled to me is the way to go.

Ketchup - I'd be very interested in knowing what specific issues were raised relative to use of distilled water for LP cleaning. I can't really see any - it's as pure as you can get but it's not like I'm infallible on this particular application. Storage and handling are the wild cards - but these caveats would apply to water produced by any purification/demineralization process.