Have I ruined my stylus?


I left my turntable on with stylus ridng in the last groove for about 8 hours. Don't ask. I know this can't be good, but how bad is it?
herman
Heck no!
Consider all the hours you have or will have. Consider in all those hours all the clicks or pops you might get. How meny records do you play in a row? Ever listen all day?
Hope this gives you some confidence. I, too, have done this, left my cartridge on all night (meticulas, but not perfect) more than once, with more than one cartridge.
Question- if I play records all day, stopping only to flip them, and clean the stylas, is this more prone to wear, and also, what are the best cleaning methods in addition to those (or that) described above?
consider it to be your normal stylus wear. if you have a diamond stylus you can scratch the match lightning surface and nothing will happen. it's realy more the cantilever issue to determine the cartridge wear.

i used to have 5 year-old benz glider worked with no problem, never damaged the records and sounded and probably still sounds great with tens of thousand hours on that.
Leaving the stylus running in the lead out groove isn't good in my opinion, when you consider the back and forth shock involved when the cartridge is thrown back into the inner part of the lead out grooves. Will 8 hours ruin your cartridge? I'd inspect it with magnification as suggested by George, maybe play a common record on it and see how she goes. Common sense tells me that this may break down the suspension pre-maturely, and it may weaken the shaft (imagine bending a solid core wire back and forth. Over time the wire developes a stress point which it eventually break at). While inspecting under magnification, I'd look closely at the shaft for stress points. Cleaning the stylus is also a great idea, however I'd inspect the stylus under magnification first, then clean the stylus, then re-inspect. This will give you an idea as to the effectiveness of your stylus cleaning method. I use LP#9, which works very well.

Hopefully all is okay. Keep us informed!
Actually Linn also had a green sandpaper (sort of) that I still use, I have also read about the matchbook in these pages before too.

I have read that leaving the turntable running at the end of a record wears just like playing a record in the regular way.

It is interesting what you have said Twl.
Hee hee, Twl. I've done this and it does work. As a matter of fact, didn't Linn (or someone) actually hand out, or even sell, a thingy that was no more than a matchbook striker back in the early 70's or so? I think I might even have one of these in a box in that red-hot space above the garage somewhere. Yet another reason to go up there and scrounge around, but been waiting for weather that didn't induce a stroke. :-)
Herman, you have put about 8 hours of wear on your stylus, but you have not ruined it. I will need a good cleaning to get the plastic off of it. The groove builds up heat when being run over continuously like that, and some plastic will be amalgamated onto your stylus contact points. This will require some judicious cleaning to get it off. My recommendation is to use a fresh paper matchbook striker, angled in the same way as the angles on your stylus, and stroke lightly from back-to-front several times on each side. Don't hook the stylus with the staple! Or remove the staple first. This gets the "crud" off. I am not joking about this, although it may seem brutal. I have cleaned styli this way for years, and it doesn't hurt anything. This was the Linn recommended stylus cleaning procedure.
Clean the tip carefully;then listen.If you don't have one,go to R S and get one of those 30x lighted magnifiers. See if you have black on the tip. I would say it should be fine.