First impressions of the Audio Desk Record Cleaner


This is my first US cleaner. I was using a spin clean before - tedious at best.

The $4K price tag was a barrier for a long time but I found a used low mileage one a few weeks ago for sale from Analog Audio (Minneapolis, MN). The owner Paul Blizel was great btw.

I’m systematically going through maybe 400 records using the full 5 min cleaning cycle so 9 mins total per record. I’m a 125 into the task.

Most of my records are new, and quite a few are higher-end pressings.

I had 2 new records with flaws in the pressings, including Wild Flower and all the rest. Track 1 has a visible production flaw - AD made a slightly better but didn’t solve that issue - no surprise there.

Dire Straits On Every Street was full of static-sounds with no visible flaws. I did have my local dealer run it through his AD but I’m sure it was a 1 min clean. It took 2 X 5 min sessions, but it now sounds great. This record was a litmus test for me because the distortion was annoying on every track. Well done AD.

As I listen to the newly cleaned records, I’m astonished by the newfound clarity and blacker backgrounds, even on the high-end pressings like one step and masters from Analogue Productions and MOFI. It’s a significant upgrade.

Maybe I should have bought one sooner.

 

macg19

Showing 2 responses by macg19

@tablejockey

 

When I take the leap, it will be the AD or Degritter.

These were my choices too - the used AD came up first.

Enjoy your noise free LP’s.

Thanks!

Not sure where some of the math comes from...

AD is $4K new as most retailers in the US and mine listed for $2,500 and came with brand new roller brushes, filter, wiper blades and 5 bottles of cleaning solution (so supplies for ~500 records. It was used on about 200 records prior to me.

As for my time - it takes ~1 min per record, so call it 8 hours of my time for 400-ish records.  

I'll report back if it breaks. 

In the meantime, the results are well beyond my expectations.