Static on turntable


Hello all!

I see there are some very smart people here who can probably give me some advice.

I've been getting into listening to vinyl.  Have a Fluance RT84 with Ortofon 2M Blue cartridge.  I've upgraded to the acrylic platter.  I have also been using one of the Fluance record weights.  My receiver is a Denon AVR X2800h.  

Everything has been sounding quite great until recently.  Recently I listened to the Getz/Gilberto Acoustic Sounds reissue and it was wonderful.  As was the Dave Brubeck Time Out recording.

I had gotten a Rachmaninoff album from Warner Classics.  It was sealed.  I did notice that the record seemed extremely staticky.  I put it on the turntable and played it (after using the Fluance carbon fiber brush on it to remove static).  Very quickly I started noticing some very loud pops (almost electric sounding).  They continued throughout fairly regularly.  When I took the record off the turntable, it seemed the entire platter and turntable were now more statically charged.

Then I tried playing a brand new copy of the Miles Davis Kind of Blue UHQR from Analogue Productions.  Even this record was experiencing these loud pops.

I found that things seemed to improve when I took off the acrylic platter and washed it with a damp microfiber and then cotton cloth.

I then washed this Rachmaninoff album in my Spin Clean and it did sound better initially but soon seemed to recollect static and start popping.

Has anyone experienced such a thing?  Any solutions?  Kind of frustrating!

chille1525

Showing 1 response by elliottbnewcombjr

OP said:

"sounding quite great until recently.  Recently ... wonderful."

everything was fine, in his environment that did not change, thus it isn't the carpet or the way OP yanked his LPs out of the sleeves.

the platter mat was fine, was in play when it sounded great.

"Very quickly I started noticing some very loud pops (almost electric sounding)."

minor even consistent static does not make loud pops.

the new LP was a mess, but it was properly cleaned, , and subsequently cleaned.

If previously great sounding LP's now have problems, something changed, WHAT?

stylus AND cantilever full of gunk from the new problematic LP?

considering nothing changed until the new 'slimy' lp was played: what else could have changed?

lastly: always ask: misled by inadvertent coincidental timing of a different source of the problem?