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 tablejockey

"Maybe I should have bought one sooner."

Having used the AD whenever I've had the opportunity, I'm certain I would think the same.

Long time SC user, who keeps waffling on getting a proper machine.

As a bin diver looking for period presses, US is most certainly the way to go. When I take the leap, it will be the AD or Degritter.

Enjoy your noise free LP's.

"I have used mine only on records that have remained noisy after multiple, thorough cleanings with a vacuum machine (Nitty Gritty).  For almost all of these records the added ultrasonic cleaning made no difference."

Even the best RCM will not fix groove damage.