Tubbs Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 Just found this on the net. thought it might be useful and before anyone else says it, no it's not about disposing of big metal things you put your rubbish. I found an article that fixes 85% of all heavy skips by back cueing. I use a heavier conical STANTON DJ cartridge. I have been able to pull the stylus through the small area and pulling the finger lift left or right (which ever the skip is going) while listening to the pop. Most I couldn't even hear afterward! I just did this earlier today with Junior Walker's "Shotgun".
Guest Jamie Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 I usually just phone the skip company when it's full. Sorry! Jamie
Guest Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 Just found this on the net. thought it might be useful and before anyone else says it, no it's not about disposing of big metal things you put your rubbish. I found an article that fixes 85% of all heavy skips by back cueing. I use a heavier conical STANTON DJ cartridge. I have been able to pull the stylus through the small area and pulling the finger lift left or right (which ever the skip is going) while listening to the pop. Most I couldn't even hear afterward! I just did this earlier today with Junior Walker's "Shotgun". link Be a few Garfield Fleming fans would be happy about this,bullshit you just got lucky mr Tubbs!!!
chrissie Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 Only way to get rid of Skips is to eat them, you are talking about those funny tasting snacks, aren't you? QoF xx
Tubbs Posted September 5, 2005 Author Posted September 5, 2005 Be a few Garfield Fleming fans would be happy about this,bullshit you just got lucky mr Tubbs!!! link if most of the copies Garfield Fleming are like this then it's obviously a pressing fault not a scratch that's done it. Never said it was me who tried it either said i found article on net. Don't you just love people who don't read posts properly Tubbs
Guest Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 Just found this on the net. thought it might be useful and before anyone else says it, no it's not about disposing of big metal things you put your rubbish. I found an article that fixes 85% of all heavy skips by back cueing. I use a heavier conical STANTON DJ cartridge. I have been able to pull the stylus through the small area and pulling the finger lift left or right (which ever the skip is going) while listening to the pop. Most I couldn't even hear afterward! I just did this earlier today with Junior Walker's "Shotgun". link Any chance of the web link, sounds interesting. Brett
Pete S Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 I've been doing this for a few years, as well as using a scalpel to push the scratch back in - but it's hit and miss, only succesful about 1 in every 5 times..for me anyway
Guest Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 if most of the copies Garfield Fleming are like this then it's obviously a pressing fault not a scratch that's done it. Never said it was me who tried it either said i found article on net. Don't you just love people who don't read posts properly Tubbs link Would have been easier to post the artical would it not?
Guest Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 Just found this on the net. thought it might be useful and before anyone else says it, no it's not about disposing of big metal things you put your rubbish. I found an article that fixes 85% of all heavy skips by back cueing.i`m up to speed till the next line!! I use a heavier conical STANTON DJ cartridge. I have been able to pull the stylus through the small area and pulling the finger lift left or right (which ever the skip is going) while listening to the pop. Most I couldn't even hear afterward! I just did this earlier today with Junior Walker's "Shotgun". link
Tubbs Posted September 5, 2005 Author Posted September 5, 2005 Would have been easier to post the artical would it not? link That was the article somebody asked how to fix skips that was the guys reply
Guest Posted September 5, 2005 Posted September 5, 2005 So i did read the thread,just didnt understand
Simon T Posted September 8, 2005 Posted September 8, 2005 Someone once told me you can cure some skips and scratches by finding the offending area and running a cocktail stick backwards and forward through the groove. Worth a try if desperate?
Djr Posted September 9, 2005 Posted September 9, 2005 I had a 45 that played fine on the portable, skipped at home (I was using stanton cartridges) . Bought some shure white labels to replace the stantons, and skip disappeared......
jazzyjas Posted September 9, 2005 Posted September 9, 2005 I just corrected a lateral skip on a 45 the other day with an exacto knife blade, after hearing Pete's method and it worked. I just had to create a new path so the needle would follow the right way and play the song. Very delicate procedure. I also lucked out in the way that you can't hear where I fixed it. I use a Shure M44-7 cartridge/needle. I'm not a big fan of Stanton at all. I used to use them years ago, when I was more into hip hop. I've found that the M44-7 had better sound and can take the abuse from scratching and that sort of thing. I never find myself mixing that way anymore so I might switch to a Grado cartridge. Goes deep into the groove and has almost audiophile quality for a very affordable price. But whatever you do guys and gals, don't use those Ortofon needles that look like anteaters. I've seen people destroy brand new records with those things after one back-cueing. Most skips are just from junk stuck in the groove anyway, so have a good look at it before you break out the blade. Wet it down good with a rubbing alcohol/water mixture and let the needle plow on through. Playing a styrene record wet quiets the noise down a little too, if you're recording something to archive it. KTF Jas
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