Re: (313) re: Subject: cleaning records

2003-03-05 Thread James Bucknell
any water used in cleaning records should be distilled water. tap or bottled
water has crap in it.
james 

 From: David Hampson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Tue, 4 Mar 2003 17:11:23 -
 To: 313@hyperreal.org
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: (313) re: Subject: cleaning records
 
 Best thing is to be very careful with them so you don't ever have to clean
 them!  Here is what I do:
 
 I find light dust or finger marks you can get off with a silicone impregnated
 cloth (you can get these from some good vinyl stores and many bad ones too).
 If you have heavy dust rinse or soak in cold water first (to remove particles
 that may scratch the surface), stand upright to leave to dry then use your
 silicone cloth again to wipe.  Remember to avoid getting water on the label!
 
 If there is more than just dust and light fingermarks you can either use
 isopropyl alcohol (you can buy this from chemists or buy it from record stores
 at higher prices in bottles marked record cleaner) but I personally use the
 cheaper method of water plus washing up liquid - spray on, leave for a  minute
 then use a soft cloth to clean, then rinse or soak in cold water until there
 are no more suds then stand upright and allow to dry.
 
 If it is very very dirty (food stains, ingrained dust etc) first spray on a
 heavy soap solution to allow ingrained dust to be dissolved or to float out of
 the grooves, rinse and then clean again.
 
 I've seen the staff in Reckless Records in London using lighter fuel to clean
 records but I'm not 100% sure whether or not this is good for your records - I
 personally would not put it near my records!  However it is very very useful
 for taking off those annoying price stickers which tend to destroy your
 sleeves when you try to remove them - simply spray the label until it is
 soaked and leave it until the fuel has just evaporated, then the sticker will
 come off easily (if it doesn't give it another coat and it should come off
 easier next time) (note - if you are removing many labels in a non-ventilated
 room it may do some good to have some ambient music available)...  Top tip 2 -
 you can also use the lighter fuel to regenerate your marker pens - simply
 spray into the pen tip, put lid back on and leave overnight and it doubles the
 life of the marker pen, thus saving you the cost of the tin of fuel :)
 
 David
 
 -
 Subject: cleaning records
 Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 probably been asked a million times but whats the best stuff for cleaning
 records...also does putting weights on the end of the tone arms make the
 record wear out faster???
 -
 
 



RE: (313) re: Subject: cleaning records

2003-03-05 Thread David Hampson
Never really thought about that - I 'll switch to using distilled water from 
now on! It would probably be beneficial to also switch from washing up liquid 
(which I know contains a bit more than just soap) to a milder soap, though I'm 
sure hand soaps have other additives...  anyone with any ideas here?

As for the GruveGlide and Disc Doctor has anyone experimented with it and 
really got significantly better results?  It seems quite a high initial outlay 
(especially with Disc Doctor) and I've never bought a brand new record before 
and thought that sounds like the record is really dirty! like they seem to 
imply!  Perhaps I need to replace my Technics 1200 decks with something more 
audiophile!?!

David



-Original Message-
From: James Bucknell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 5:01 PM
To: David Hampson; 313@hyperreal.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: (313) re: Subject: cleaning records


any water used in cleaning records should be distilled water. tap or bottled
water has crap in it.
james 



(313) re: Subject: cleaning records

2003-03-04 Thread David Hampson
Best thing is to be very careful with them so you don't ever have to clean 
them!  Here is what I do:

I find light dust or finger marks you can get off with a silicone impregnated 
cloth (you can get these from some good vinyl stores and many bad ones too).  
If you have heavy dust rinse or soak in cold water first (to remove particles 
that may scratch the surface), stand upright to leave to dry then use your 
silicone cloth again to wipe.  Remember to avoid getting water on the label!

If there is more than just dust and light fingermarks you can either use 
isopropyl alcohol (you can buy this from chemists or buy it from record stores 
at higher prices in bottles marked record cleaner) but I personally use the 
cheaper method of water plus washing up liquid - spray on, leave for a  minute 
then use a soft cloth to clean, then rinse or soak in cold water until there 
are no more suds then stand upright and allow to dry.  

If it is very very dirty (food stains, ingrained dust etc) first spray on a 
heavy soap solution to allow ingrained dust to be dissolved or to float out of 
the grooves, rinse and then clean again.

I've seen the staff in Reckless Records in London using lighter fuel to clean 
records but I'm not 100% sure whether or not this is good for your records - I 
personally would not put it near my records!  However it is very very useful 
for taking off those annoying price stickers which tend to destroy your sleeves 
when you try to remove them - simply spray the label until it is soaked and 
leave it until the fuel has just evaporated, then the sticker will come off 
easily (if it doesn't give it another coat and it should come off easier next 
time) (note - if you are removing many labels in a non-ventilated room it may 
do some good to have some ambient music available)...  Top tip 2 - you can also 
use the lighter fuel to regenerate your marker pens - simply spray into the pen 
tip, put lid back on and leave overnight and it doubles the life of the marker 
pen, thus saving you the cost of the tin of fuel :)

David

-
Subject: cleaning records
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

probably been asked a million times but whats the best stuff for cleaning
records...also does putting weights on the end of the tone arms make the
record wear out faster???
-