Finch Platte Wrote:
DO NOT LISTEN to these people telling you to use tap water to clean off records! There is so much crap in tap water, it just grinds stuff into the soft vinyl.
I believe you can use distilled water safely, but I'd check into this, first.
Jesus, people.
Uhh, Finch, that "soft vinyl" reproduces sound through contact with a
DIAMOND tip that's ground to a pretty decent point.
But your advice is still sound- the contaminants in tap water can stay on the record surface and increase surface noise, instead of the desired goal of decreasing it.
For the DIY-inclined, here you go:
Mix 4 parts de-ionized (or at least distilled) water with 1 part 91% isopropyl alcohol (nothing less pure and NOT "rubbing alcohol" that contains other ingredients) and a minuscule drop of dishwashing liquid. Shake the mix, and if it bubbles up, you used too much dishwashing soap. Start over. This is an easy, cheap, and fairly effective solution for record-cleaning that I think came from the Library Of Congress.
Put yr rekkid on a soft towel and put about a tablespoon of cleaning fluid on surface 1. Use a boar's bristle paint brush that has been trimmed down to about 2" bristle length, and paint that fluid around the record surface, going in both directions. Then, use soft clean cloths to remove the liquid and dry the record surface. Some people like to rinse with distilled water. I've never found it necessary. Repeat for side 2.
A Discwasher brush, or one of those dry record cleaning brushes should always be on hand when playing records, as well as a brush suitable for cleaning the stylus periodically.