How do you steam clean vinyl LP's?


I've been thinking about purchasing a VPI 16.5 to clean my LP's, but I have read things here on A'gon about steam cleaning your LP's.

Steam makes sence to me, but how can you be sure it's not too hot, to where it might damage the vinyl?

Is there a machine that uses steam, and how does it work? Is there scrubbing, or any special solutions you use to combine with the steam? What dries the steam from the vinyl?

In advance, thanks!
louisl
Buconero117 writes:

You do want to find the label cover device that is available on e-Bay from time to time, it prevents the label from being steamed off and is a handy way to actual hold the record without touching the groves.

A cheap alternative is described in this thread. A pair of car dent pullers from Autozone at $4.99 (or less) each.

http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showthread.php?t=181384

Regards,
I think the 16.5 is one of the smartest moves in cleaning. Spend less and you get less, spend more and you really don't get any essential advantages. Make sure to use a separate cork mat for the clean side and a different brush for each step.
I also see no reason to view a cleaning machine and steam as mutually exclusive alternatives. I view steam as an adjunct to the cleaning process. For example, I use the Disc Doctor regimen but have worked steam in after the initial scrub and as the initial rince. It's much easier to steam uniformly on the spinning 16.5 platter. Follow up with a couple ultra pure water rinces(each with separate brushes) and I doubt anything works much better. Other methods probably get similar results but also cost more.
A good thorough regimen may take you 5-7 minutes per LP side but I believe this only needs to be done once and theresults are worth it.
I agree with sonofjim that used in combination, the rcm and steaming produce outstanding results. With or without steaming, a good cleaning fluid, good brush to scrub(yes u must scrub) and a good rinze with very clean water (i like ro water), are requisites. Steaming does a wonderful job especially on those grundgy cheap records.