Realpeoplesmusic Posted October 5, 2010 Posted October 5, 2010 Hi Folks, just looking for some advice/info on where i can get records professionally cleaned to remove background noise or at least improve it! I also have a record that has a slight skip in it is there anyway that this can be removed or improved in anyway? any info or advice would be great.... Many Thanks Callum
Soulfuljules Posted October 5, 2010 Posted October 5, 2010 Hi Folks, just looking for some advice/info on where i can get records professionally cleaned to remove background noise or at least improve it! I also have a record that has a slight skip in it is there anyway that this can be removed or improved in anyway? any info or advice would be great.... Many Thanks Callum don't know about scratches but when it comes to background noise i use a "Disco-Antistat Record Cleaning Set" by Knosti (Germany) which is pretty good. It's like a manual washing machine for records (both lps and 45s). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXHKeM2TGWQ https://www.avreview.co.uk/review/reviewproductreviews/mps/rpn/4312/prod/Knosti_Disco%20Antistat/rcn/50/rgn/6/v/1/p/1/ https://www.thomann.de/gb/knosti_schallplattenwaschgeraet.htm It's really good for dusty grooves, and it usually improves the sound quality as it takes away decades of dirt and grease deposited on the grooves. Try ebay.de g
Rugby Soul Club Posted October 5, 2010 Posted October 5, 2010 Hi Folks, just looking for some advice/info on where i can get records professionally cleaned to remove background noise or at least improve it! I also have a record that has a slight skip in it is there anyway that this can be removed or improved in anyway? any info or advice would be great.... Many Thanks Callum Callum, re: the skip. I will have to find the old post but I got Dean to do it on a bargain I got from America that had a jump right at the beginning. I didn't wanna do it incase it went wrong...but it worked perfectly. Something along the lines of rubbing it with your thumb in the direction of the grooves until it gets warm and keep repeating til it smooths the skip...
Realpeoplesmusic Posted October 5, 2010 Author Posted October 5, 2010 Callum, re: the skip. I will have to find the old post but I got Dean to do it on a bargain I got from America that had a jump right at the beginning. I didn't wanna do it incase it went wrong...but it worked perfectly. Something along the lines of rubbing it with your thumb in the direction of the grooves until it gets warm and keep repeating til it smooths the skip... Hi Sian, Any info on dean's thumb rubbing would be great.It's a pretty special record so i'd like to try and sort it if possible otherwise i'll just have to play it with a skip half way through, lol!
Rugby Soul Club Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 Hi Sian, Any info on dean's thumb rubbing would be great.It's a pretty special record so i'd like to try and sort it if possible otherwise i'll just have to play it with a skip half way through, lol! Well I've been right back to July '08, I didn't realise I could talk that much... I can't find the original member who gave the advise but found the one where I passed it onto someone else. It does work... Wet your thumb with spit and rub the jump til your finger gets warm, rub the same way the needle would go. Then play. If it doesn't work first time, do it again for a couple of times. Makes sure you do it til your thumb gets quite warm.
Pete S Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 Well I've been right back to July '08, I didn't realise I could talk that much... I can't find the original member who gave the advise but found the one where I passed it onto someone else. It does work... Wet your thumb with spit and rub the jump til your finger gets warm, rub the same way the needle would go. Then play. If it doesn't work first time, do it again for a couple of times. Makes sure you do it til your thumb gets quite warm. ...and then the alarm goes off and you wake up...
Garswood Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 what about a record that sticks, anyway of sorting that out, does anybody know of someone offering a service that sorts this problem out, sure i read once on SS of a member offering this service, can't find the thread though....phil
pikeys dog Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 Rubbing spit into a record with your thumb until it gets warm will result in two things: 1, a record that smells of spit. 2, a blister on the end of your thumb. Capitol advice.
Pete S Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 what about a record that sticks, anyway of sorting that out, does anybody know of someone offering a service that sorts this problem out, sure i read once on SS of a member offering this service, can't find the thread though....phil I used to be able to do it, I can still do it sometimes but my eyes are so bad now that it's really difficult to see what I'm doing. If you've got good eyesight, all you need is a scalpel.
Mace Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 (edited) If you know anyone who has a player that has 78rpm try playing it on that (don't flip the stylus over though, leave it on 45rpm stylus). Sometimes the faster speed helps 'cut' through the jump. Also try turning deck backwards manually where it skips, sometimes it will cut back over skip when turned in reverse. Then you can try a fine needle and magnifying glass to physically scratch over whatever is causing the skip by rejoining the groove correctly. Other than that.....try the spit and thumb method. Probably won't work, but your thumb will be so sore you won't give a shit about the record for a while... Edited October 6, 2010 by Mace
Rugby Soul Club Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 ...and then the alarm goes off and you wake up... Rubbing spit into a record with your thumb until it gets warm will result in two things: 1, a record that smells of spit. 2, a blister on the end of your thumb. Capitol advice. If you know anyone who has a player that has 78rpm try playing it on that (don't flip the stylus over though, leave it on 45rpm stylus). Sometimes the faster speed helps 'cut' through the jump. Also try turning deck backwards manually where it skips, sometimes it will cut back over skip when turned in reverse. Then you can try a fine needle and magnifying glass to physically scratch over whatever is causing the skip by rejoining the groove correctly. Other than that.....try the spit and thumb method. Probably won't work, but your thumb will be so sore you won't give a shit about the record for a while... Oh yee of little faith... I have the record that now plays perfectly to prove it works... Good job I'm not intimidated by you men folk...
phillyDaveG Posted October 6, 2010 Posted October 6, 2010 I have a Loricraft record cleaner; https://www.loricraft.com/prc2.html It was, without a shadow of a doubt, the best investment I've ever made when it comes to records. I trialled various "professional" cleaning machines before I purchased this one, and it knocked spots off the others for performance. As for removing scratches, the answer is no. Nothing can do that. However, a thorough clean can very often cure record skips, because the stylus runs deeper and truer in the groove, and isn't riding on years of accumulated muck. I cleaned a friend's entire collection he sold before emigrating, and it raised many a records grading, and cured lots of skips. I cringe now when I read some of the crude cleaning methods suggested, it takes me a fraction of the time and with far better results. ...and no, I'm not on commission!!!
Steve Brown Posted October 10, 2010 Posted October 10, 2010 Try contacting Glenn Bellamy from Out of The Past Records. He will clean a record up and improve the grading as can me old mate Jem Brittin who is a member on here.
Pete S Posted October 10, 2010 Posted October 10, 2010 Try contacting Glenn Bellamy from Out of The Past Records. He will clean a record up and improve the grading as can me old mate Jem Brittin who is a member on here. Yeah but the sound stays the same despite the record looking cleaner, I understand why they do it but it's not an honest thing to do.
Guest Posted October 10, 2010 Posted October 10, 2010 Callum, re: the skip. I will have to find the old post but I got Dean to do it on a bargain I got from America that had a jump right at the beginning. I didn't wanna do it incase it went wrong...but it worked perfectly. Something along the lines of rubbing it with your thumb in the direction of the grooves until it gets warm and keep repeating til it smooths the skip... Wont that give the disk a Chinese burn
Rugby Soul Club Posted October 10, 2010 Posted October 10, 2010 Wont that give the disk a Chinese burn Don't you start sunny Jim... Dean showed Pete Robinson (RIP) how to do it and it worked for him but then you can't ask him for proof...
Ceejay Posted October 10, 2010 Posted October 10, 2010 A mate of mine swears he uses wire wool.......................don't think I'd recommend it though, lol!!!
Steve Brown Posted October 11, 2010 Posted October 11, 2010 Yeah but the sound stays the same despite the record looking cleaner, I understand why they do it but it's not an honest thing to do. Pete, I promise you that it does get a lot of the background pops and clicks out. Jem has done a few for me that have turned up from evil bay looking wrecked. He has managed to turn them into very playable copies that I would have binned.
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