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Established in 2016

Facts

Cleanliness is absolutely mandatory if the optimum sonic capability of the vinyl medium is to be realized. A clean record will not only sound better, but last longer. It has been shown that repeated playing of soiled records can cause permanent damage to the vinyl. Preservation of valuable or irreplaceable records requires careful cleaning.  Further, stylus wear is greatly accelerated by playing dirty records, and with cartridges costing what they do these days, playing soiled recordings records can lead to significant and unneeded expense.

As the stylus navigates its torturous travail through the undulating grooves that comprise the record surface, incredible pressure is exerted on the vinyl and the friction produces a fair amount of heat. This process alone is hard enough on the relatively soft vinyl that comprises the LP, add to this equation the dust, dirt and other contaminants so often found on our records, and we have a recipe for disaster. The fact is, playing heavily soiled records literally destroys them!

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One Vinyl

Let's begin with the don't s

There are certain things that you should most definitely avoid when cleaning vinyl. The most contentious of the lot and one that will have a few readers and some hi-fi journalists up in arms is pure, isopropyl alcohol. This stuff can be disastrous for vinyl. The problem is, it also lies within many commercial record cleaning products, so look carefully at the ingredients before you use them. Pure alcohol strips away much of the dirt and impurities from grooves – which is great – but it also removes the protective coating that rests on the groove walls/floor. I don’t mean the ‘release agent’ that a record pressing plant utilizes and is often left to bung up vinyl grooves, either. Once that essential protective layer is gone, music sounds harsh and brittle. There have been done a series of sound tests to prove this phenomenon. Initially, alcohol-cleaned records sound great. After the third or fourth clean, they sound terrible. By then, though, it’s too late and your record has been irretrievably scarred.

Another no-no is commercial cleaning products (i.e. sprays, liquids and the like) hanging around your kitchen. They can often attack the vinyl itself or, at the very least, block your grooves with more rubbish than they remove.

Also, do not rinse vinyl under a tap. You risk damaging the fragile record label. Tap water also includes plenty of impurities which re-infect record grooves.

Finally, new records need cleaning too. They are normally infested with dust – even on a micro level – plus that oily pressing plant release agent I mentioned earlier.

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Provide the best vinyl cleaning accessories for the demanding collector

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Being the number one choice for record enthusiasts around the globe

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