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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20239 |
Posted: January 16 2006 at 11:04 |
Salut Olivier,
You actually wash your records? I have friends who tried that and destroyede them even though they were careful. Even with your special liquid, the problem I always feared is proper drying. How do you manage that, even with alcohol and distilled water, the water will leave residues? furthermore I would never use soap, because it leaves a film even if in minute quantities as you suggest. I never did more than the proper-product moistened felt brush and never thought of more. I have a friend who tried air cleaning through a three bar guns, but I have always been reluctant in case there are impurities in the air. As for the stylus (the lecture head, sinse the cartridge is the whole head including the moving coils), I have never washed it either. just used the brush that accompagnied the felt brush. I had during the 70's and 80's a Shure cartrige (never had but one in my canadian years), and only replaced the stylus once. I am waiting for next year to buy a good turtable, but by all means, no emergency.
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let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword |
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 26 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 6308 |
Posted: January 16 2006 at 12:17 |
Salut Sean!
Yes, I did it and it works. Indeed, to dry it is not that easy, but is possible with a fan for example, or dry it with a very soft, non abrasive cloth. As soon as you find the good way to proceed, it’s easy. The receipt i gave works. Distilled water is used cause it’s chalky free and should not let anything. About the soap, I must precise to use neutral soap (it exists) without detergent, the simplest formula, which doesn’t let anything on the record after drying. If you don’t trust this formula, try the “Metanac” kind of products which is easier to use (you put the product, then gently wipes with the felt brush and it evaporates instantly, giving a shining “new” record) so no drying issue, but it’s more expensive than the house receipt… When you don’t clean your records, and if it contains dirt in the grooves -which is very often the case-, the stylus unstucks it, it heats in contact to the stylus, then it “cooks”, becomes harder as it burns, and eventually damages both stylus and all the records you’ll play on your turntable then. Of course, it ruins the sound on playback as there are big impurities between the stylus and the groove. That what you’d see by observing it through a microscope. The cartridge cleaning liquid is efficient and easy to use. It’s designed to not let any residue layer on the stylus surface. In the 70's/80's there was a more sophisticated product (and better than any liquid) which unstuck the dirt by ultra sonic frequencies, so without any physical contact. It’s unfortunately unavailable on the market now. I don’t even allude to the fact that the cartridge get magnetized, and so needs demagnetization from times to times, like tapedeck heads does. As you said, a good stylus can last very long before needing replacment. Edited by oliverstoned |
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IcedSabbath
Forum Groupie Joined: January 11 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 87 |
Posted: January 17 2006 at 17:52 |
Very cool! Thanks for the links & info. |
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 26 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 6308 |
Posted: January 18 2006 at 05:53 |
That's a pleasure.
I highly recommend these speakers. M71i was my former ones. I used it with high end equipment and a sub. But i had to change when i upgraded my Nad CD for a big digital set up (Sonic frontiers drive + Goldmund converter with Nordost cable). So, i've upgraded to M32i model now and i am very happy. Mission does very musical speakers at ridiculous low price. English are the king of the cheap musical products... Edited by oliverstoned |
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listennow801
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: January 29 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1819 |
Posted: January 29 2006 at 04:18 |
I've recently learned that Akarma, an Italian label, releases a lot of classic Italian prog on Vinyl. The LPs are supposed to be really nice 180 gr. vinyl, but quite expensive. [I've only recently begun exploring 70s It. prog., and there's some friggin' great stuff out there! Wondrous to these longing ears...] Check out Edited by listennow801 |
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Ratings of Lady Gnosis: http://www.gnosis2000.net/raterclaire.shtml |
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 26 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 6308 |
Posted: January 29 2006 at 05:31 |
Unfortunatly, the sound quality of Akarma vynils (and most cds to) is very bad. It's (bad) digital.
Edited by oliverstoned |
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