Turntable Belt Care—talc or corn starch?


While servicing my belt driven turntable recently I discovered my 15 year old container of unscented talcum powder had disappeared. While shopping for more, I found that drug store talcum powder isn’t really talcum powder anymore. Because of cancer concerns, the talc has been replaced with corn starch. For our needs, both can be considered a lubricant.

VPI said using corn starch on the belt is okay, just make sure to wipe any grease off of the belt, pulley and platter rim before you powder and install the belt.

In the past some manufacturers put talc in the bag with the belt. Anthrax fears ended that.

I was able to find real talcum powder online and some dive/surf shops have it (to ease donning wetsuits).

If you’ve forgotten how to powder the belt, put some powder in a baggie with the belt and shake, take the belt out, shake off the excess powder and reinstall.

Why do this? The powder allows the belt to slip slightly on start-up acting like a clutch, reducing/eliminating belt noise and extending belt life.

Maybe it’s just me, but I prefer using talc (a mineral) over cornstarch (a food). Perhaps it’s that talc isn’t water soluble so it’s unaffected by humidity or moisture like corn starch? Is that really a concern? Or that manufacturers have recommended using talc in the past and not the more common corn starch?

Either way, now you’re aware. If even you care.

And if you have a direct, magnetic or idler arm turntable, no belt, no worries—you can stay out of your wife’s kitchen domain looking for corn starch. I recommend that like I recommend talc.

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Showing 2 responses by oldhvymec

Absorbs is the issue in talcum. I’ve never seen anyone use cornstarch. I would’t use it.. I don’t keep my belts in a bag with powder.

 

I clean the belts with warm soapy water. I rinse them in hot tap water and turn them inside out and put them on the right size jar. I let them dry and spray them with silicone spray and let them dry a second time. I remove them from the jar and flip them the correct direction and in a dry new bag they go.. NO POWDER!!

Before I install a treated belt I put it in a talkum dust bag. I powder it. Take it out of the bag with your (powdered) nitril gloves on and drop it on a paper towel a couple of times. Drop it on the narrow side of the belt a couple of times..

 

It’s ready to install. DON’T breath the powder or any powder for that matter.

 

Clean all the pully surfaces with alcohol. Clean and service the platter bearing at the same time.. Same with the motor. Clean, oil and reclean as needed.

 

101 TT maintenance.. Enjoy..

 

Regards

I have a 47lb platter it takes a little help to get it started with 2 motors. I quit using it and went back to the same TT I've used for 1000 years.. TD124s and Russcos

Belt drives, Rem drives. outside O-Ring.. It's still the platter bearing and how it's set up..

 

Anybody have a TD124DD?

 

Regards