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May 2008
Enjoy the Music.com

DIY Record Cleaning Machine
Plus various DIY record cleaning formulas!

Review By Frank Gales
Click here to e-mail reviewer

  This is the description of a record cleaning machine I built. It uses an industrial wet vacuum cleaner with 1000W to suck the cleaning fluid from the record. The fluid is applied by swinging a tube over the record and pumping with a manual pump. The platter is rotated manually and a normal paint brush can be used to get the dirt out of the grooves. I use a professional brush from a Moth record cleaning machine. After that the sucking tube is swinged onto the record (please don't forget to glue the velvet onto the tube, or the first record you cleaned is cleaned to death) and the vacuum cleaner is switched on. One or two spins should be enough to suck all the fluid with the dirt away.

 

Top View

Above is a top view of the record cleaning machine. The plinth is a box which is about 10cm high. I used MDF because it is good if the whole thing is rather heavy, so that the machine does not move while vacuuming. The vacuum is rather high as the air slit is very small compared to a cleaning tube of a vacuum cleaner.

 

Side View

 

View From Underside the Cleaning Tube

 

If you build such a machine please send me some feedback. If you have problems with the description, feel free to ask me.

Frank Gales
Germany

 

 

And Now It's Time For Some Liquid Refreshment!

 

  For all you vinyl junkies out there, i Steven R. Rochlin have gathered a few suggested cleaning concoctions many years ago from the Internet and other sources. i offer no responsibility for these formulations, though quite a few people swear by certain ones. Me? Well, being lazy means i prefer either Nitty Gritty or VPI's stuff. Let the Mad Scientist in you begin!

   distilled water            alcohol                 detergent
------------------------------------------------------------------
1)      1 part           1 part isopropyl              none
2)      1 part           1 part isopropyl      a drop of Triton X-100
3)      1 quart         1 pint denatured        10 drops Photoflo
4)      3 parts               1 part               a few drops
5)      3 parts           1 part rubbing            a few drops
6)      4 parts           1 part ethanol                some

 

Don't forget to use your Hunt EDA brush! Remember: a clean needle is a happy needle.

Enjoy the Music,

Steven R. Rochlin

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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