Guest Posted December 21, 2008 Posted December 21, 2008 Hi guys has anyone had any success in repairing a crack in a record? It hasn't gone all the way,the b side is still holding and plays ok Dave
Haydn Posted December 21, 2008 Posted December 21, 2008 Hi guys has anyone had any success in repairing a crack in a record? It hasn't gone all the way,the b side is still holding and plays ok Dave Don't know about repairing but if the crack is at the edge, carefully dab on a small spot of superglue to prevent movement and further cracking. Be patient and careful that it is set near perfect before glueing and always dab the edge downwards towards glue, this stops glue creeping into the vinyl groove or the music will suffer even more. Ps. Personally I have done this with at least 4 tunes that were worth holding onto with great playable results. If the opposite side is a rubbish tune, this can be "braced" with very thin paper and glue to further strengthen the playable side. Hope this helps to some extent but please as always, the decision is yours alone and I cannot accept responsibility H
Guest bazabod_downunder Posted December 23, 2008 Posted December 23, 2008 The glue thing has always failed for me due to the fact that it's too easy for it to go wrong, the way I've used in the past is to put the record on a very solid surface ie kitchen worktop, press down making sure that it's completely flat then run a heated knife along the outside edge (not the face) to slightly melt it. Suggest though you practice on another cracked record first before trying it on something you value....I practiced on every copy of Marlena Shaw - Wade In The Water that I could get my hands on as I had great pleasure in cracking that piece of crap...lol KTF Baz Hi guys has anyone had any success in repairing a crack in a record? It hasn't gone all the way,the b side is still holding and plays ok Dave
Suinoz Posted December 26, 2008 Posted December 26, 2008 The glue thing has always failed for me due to the fact that it's too easy for it to go wrong, the way I've used in the past is to put the record on a very solid surface ie kitchen worktop, press down making sure that it's completely flat then run a heated knife along the outside edge (not the face) to slightly melt it. Suggest though you practice on another cracked record first before trying it on something you value....I practiced on every copy of Marlena Shaw - Wade In The Water that I could get my hands on as I had great pleasure in cracking that piece of crap...lol KTF BazCrikey Baz thats a bit strong mate !! K.T.F.
Dolly13 Posted December 26, 2008 Posted December 26, 2008 Ave a word with Bury soul he is bloody marvellous at fixing 45's
Guest Johnny Mack Posted December 26, 2008 Posted December 26, 2008 Hey Baz, ..................and I heard you gained your expertise practicing on cracked copies of Don Gardner's "Cheating Kind"............................... Take care, John The glue thing has always failed for me due to the fact that it's too easy for it to go wrong, the way I've used in the past is to put the record on a very solid surface ie kitchen worktop, press down making sure that it's completely flat then run a heated knife along the outside edge (not the face) to slightly melt it. Suggest though you practice on another cracked record first before trying it on something you value....I practiced on every copy of Marlena Shaw - Wade In The Water that I could get my hands on as I had great pleasure in cracking that piece of crap...lol KTF Baz
Dave Rimmer Posted December 26, 2008 Posted December 26, 2008 Don't know about repairing but if the crack is at the edge, carefully dab on a small spot of superglue to prevent movement and further cracking. Be patient and careful that it is set near perfect before glueing and always dab the edge downwards towards glue, this stops glue creeping into the vinyl groove or the music will suffer even more. Ps. Personally I have done this with at least 4 tunes that were worth holding onto with great playable results. If the opposite side is a rubbish tune, this can be "braced" with very thin paper and glue to further strengthen the playable side. Hope this helps to some extent but please as always, the decision is yours alone and I cannot accept responsibility H DON'T DO THIS IF THE RECORD IS MADE OF STYRENE ! It does work perfectly with vinyl records though because I've done the very same thing.
Harry Crosby Posted December 26, 2008 Posted December 26, 2008 Have seen records with razor blades fixed to the flip in order to hold in place
ricticman Posted December 27, 2008 Posted December 27, 2008 Have seen records with razor blades fixed to the flip in order to hold in place I thought that was done to teach people a lesson if they put their fingers into your box uninvited ??
paultp Posted December 28, 2008 Posted December 28, 2008 Have seen records with razor blades fixed to the flip in order to hold in place Saw a copy of "To The Ends Of The Earth" (if memory serves) in a play box in Bolton some years ago with a stanley knife blade glued to the back to hold it together. Played perfectly.
Guest bazabod_downunder Posted December 28, 2008 Posted December 28, 2008 LOL....I never bought it.....would've bought a lot more with what was paid for it, but it's here in Australia in two halves in a frame....btw I think it's a shite track anyway. KTF Baz Hey Baz, ..................and I heard you gained your expertise practicing on cracked copies of Don Gardner's "Cheating Kind"............................... Take care, John
Dave Abbott Posted December 29, 2008 Posted December 29, 2008 Hi guys has anyone had any success in repairing a crack in a record? It hasn't gone all the way,the b side is still holding and plays ok Dave I did the instructions a few years back - just found it in the archives https://www.soul-source.co.uk/Broken-Record-t3727.html&p=40029&hl=razor#entry40029
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