no looking back


I posted earlier about an ultrasonic cleaner advertised in the equipment sections. I also caught up on several threads on this forum and other audio forums. I was intrigued as I had just picked up an old 60's collection that needed a lot of TLC. I had used my DIY vacuum system and steaming previously with good success. I had also recently bortowed a friends Loricraft and was really pleased with it and had been looking like i would go that route or Keith monks cleaner. However the Ultrasound process seemed simple so i wanted to see what was out there. On a whim, i picked up a Bransonic Ultrasound bath from ebay and tried it today. Its a real manual system, but it would let me know if it was worth pursuing. The first record i tried was a beat up Salty Dog from Procol Harum (hard to get a clean copy). it came out clean but had a couple of hard deposits on it. I worked with those spots and cleaned again. Then i popped it on my table and i was pretty impressed. This was just a straight cold water bath. I then moved to a full cleaning solution at 120 degrees (My usual mix of Distilled water, Isopropyl, Surfactant, and Dispersants). I cleaned a Stone Poneys, Surrealistic Pillow, and the Salty dog again at the same time. Took about 10 mins to clean, rinse and dry. Popped it back on the table and wow. The Salty dog had a little fuzz (looks like surface noise) but the Stone Poneys, and Pillow sounded like right out of the album. I really couldnt believe how quiet. After playing both albums, no sign of any trash on the stylus and upon magnification with a jeweler glass, the grooves appear to be very clean. Now the only decision is whether to get the commercial one (ie audiodesk, etc) or build a DIY. However, my vacuum and Steamer is now retired.
oilmanmojo
Dear Oilmanmojo: You really caught my attention: could you tell me which number model is the Bransonic you bought?

Thank's in advance.

regards and enjoy the music,
R.
Oilman- Can you tell me where you get the surfactant and dispersant? I bought a home-brew ultrasound unit and the only downside I can see is that it requires quite a bit of fluid and I am having a tough time sourcing those two ingredients.
I'm an audio deske owner. If I could do it over again, I would go KL Audio ultra cleaner. In either case, it's worth hand scrubbing your lp's first with your favorite cleaner, wipe them dry with a micro towel, then finish and dry with the ultrasonic cleaner. Subsequent cleaning would be with the ultra cleaner only. I question the audio desks reliability over the long haul. Not so with the KL Audio which will be in my home along side the audio deske in a month or two.
i'm not that careful about cleaning my records...don't see the need. The system sounds great as is
Kinda agree with Stringreen, not for technical reasons, but out of sheer laziness. When I use the vinyl side of my rig, I swipe the record with a carbon fiber brush that "seems" (??) to pick up a lot of dust. I also use a soft carbon fiber brush to swipe the stylus on each record play. That's as much OCD as I can do on a steady basis. Incidentally, I own a VPI 16.5 RCM, but haven't used it in over a year. Too much of a PITA.

Having said that, if there was a "reasonably" (??) priced ultrasonic cleaning machine that also dried the record(s), I might get interested in doing a better job. But honestly, all that fuss with cleaning solutions, vacuum dryers and so forth, just wrecks the fun -- for me at least. Just my humble opinion.