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Re: [ARSCLIST] Groove Damage--was: Highly unorthodox cleaning methods for LP'...



I remember many years ago seeing an ad in Goldmine
for a guy that promised a superslick treatment for vinyl
which I think used powdered graphite as a way to fill
in tiny holes and crevices that are in the groove itself.
I was wary of putting graphite on my records at the time
and the idea still strikes me as somewhat questionable.

 Can anyone comment on the Silicone and/or Graphite
application procedure? By the way, the idea behind the
graphite was identical to what Mike mentions below, the
reduction of friction in the groove path.

I doubt that Dr. Goldman thinks this is a good idea.
And I am equally sure he has some sound reasons for that thought.


Anyone care to comment yea or nay on this question?


aa

On May 23, 2004, at 6:09 PM, Mwcpc6@xxxxxxx wrote:

In a message dated 5/22/04 10:23:08 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
stevenc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:

So...how to manually correct skips or sticks on microgroove records?

Many years ago when I used to get unsleeved LPs that had been shuffled through stacks of 78s at S.A. thrift stores, I used to condition them by playing them at 78 rpm with a heavily weighted low compliance 3 mil cartridge. After a few such passes I could get many to play through, though I'm sure this did not really improve their value.

Lately I've found, subjectively, that LPs tend to skip or repeat much
less if
they are treated with silicone lubricant.  My theory is that the
reduced
friction makes the groove defect less likely to provide enough force
to throw the
stylus out of the groove.

Mike Csontos.



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