Home 2023 Forums Digital DJ Gear How to Clean a Vinyl Record

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  • #2048282
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    Frankly, I never bothered to clean discs. Keeping them in an anti-static sleeve helps (by a few old bits of vinyl online or at the garage sales, toss the discs and put your TC vinyls in) and should normally be enough. I used one of those brushes eons ago, but big disappointment. I don’t know what you mean by felt pad, as in scouring pad to rub over it? In which case I’d say don’t be bothered.

    If you run a vinyl 1 time, the needle will scoop up most of the dust. You’ll usually only gather significant amounts of dust if you don’t use your TC vinyl for a longer period of time. So, play them once, remove the lint from the stylus and you should be solid. Especially since you are not listening to music, but generating a tone that nobody gets to hear.

    I don’t know about the english term, but here we had a term when you played a (regular) track too often, we’d say it was “played grey”. And the sound quality would go from being worn. TC vinyls get used an extreme amount of times compared to regular vinyl tracks (which you might play once a night, whereas the same TC disc is played ALL night) and thus wear out relatively quickly. Not sure what the norm is these days, but expect to toss out your old TCs and replace them with fresh ones with some regularity (again, hoping some of our DVS readers can tell you generally how many hours of gig you can get out of one vinyl). This is another reason that dust shouldn’t be a big problem since you are not keeping the discs for years on end.

    #2048284
    Robert Murray
    Participant

    Wow, it never occoured to me they would wear out – but it does make sense. Does anyone have a good source (UK pls) to buy time code viynl. I see the pro have some pretty nice colours – dunno where they buy them from? (Or how much I should expect to pay)

    The 2 products I was looking at are:

    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Milty-Duopad-Vinyl-Record-Cleaner-/231281069153?pt=Turntable_Parts_Accessories&hash=item35d96d0c61

    &

    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Universal-Antistatic-Carbon-Fiber-Vinyl-Record-Dust-Cleaner-Brush-Turntable-/151375646441?pt=Turntable_Parts_Accessories&hash=item233eb10ee9

    The problem is that I practise a little every night but I don’t put the lid back on the deck – this also helps making them really easy to fire up at a moments notice to ‘Practise those cutz’
    Am I being very lazy – maybe! But my tutor tells me it’s more important to make practising easy.

    I guess the problem is that the whole dics gets a light dusting each time I come back for a practise?

    #2048285
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    That was bad policy back in the vinyl days, if you played a record, you Put it away directly. Never leave a record laying around without it’s sleeve.

    Same goes for putting the lid on your turntables when you are done. A cumulation of dust in your turntables is a bigger long term problem than some dust on your vinyls.

    You can use both options for cleaning if you want (I wouldn’t take them to a club though 🙂 ).

    Better would be to put your vinyls away after use, cover your turntables with the lids. So, I disagree with your tutor there. I think some professional discipline, showing respect for your gear, is a very valuable thing to integrate in your workflow.

    The time you gain is 30 seconds putting them away before locking up and 30 seconds putting them back on your TTs.

    You can get new vinyls from the manufacturer of your DJ Software. I also believe there are third-party suppliers you can order from.

    #2048291
    brian quigley
    Participant

    I once used old fashioned dish soap and slightly warm water to wash some vinyl. I didn’t have a problem with dust on the record, but someone spilled beer on it and you could hear the stylus jump every time it hit one of the beer spots.

    So warm water, a very mild soap and a microfiber lint-free cloth to blot it dry when you are satisfied. Here is a link I found with a few methods to clean vinyl:

    http://www.discomusic.com/101-more/6193_0_7_0_C/

    #2048298
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    Yep, liquid cleaning was an emergency action, like when you got beer spilled – it happened!

    #2048300
    Marco Solo
    Participant

    I’ve heard that wood glue works pretty well, but I’m not a vinyl guy so I haven’t tried. There’s an entire thread on it on djtt.

    #2048459
    David Freeman
    Participant

    When I used vinyl, I used a micro fiber cloth. I kept it in my bag always in case I needed it.

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