@hippieMANIAK That's what my dad always said to me! I always made sure never to say that around him ever again! However that one MAD Magazine trick record had more than one groove.
@hippieMANIAK lol Thanks and good point. Just one long-ass groove.
Yeah, I very rarely have to do this. I usually only use a brush or an anti-static cloth for normal, every day use and record cleaning solution and a sterile pad for little dustier jobs. It's only when I come across a record that's so dirty, usually involving mildew, where no other method at my disposal will get the job done.
PVA wood glue used on a standard vinyl record CANNOT cause damage because the PVA can't bind to the vinyl. Whether it's "designed" to clean records or not, there's ample proof that it works and causes no damage whatsoever, let alone "irreparable" damage. If you want proof, check out the forums at audiokarma - there's 2 years worth of posts in a single forum thread about this, and the only instances where a record was damaged was due to a non-recommended glue type being used.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
Wood glue is not designed for restoring Vinyl Records. It should NEVER be used on rare records, or records with musical or cultural significance, as the wood glue is capapble of causing irreparable damage in a number ways.
Don't use this method on any record. A good record machine takes 3 minutes to clean, no fuss. No waiting for 16 hours....dumb.
Producerdirector2 4 weeks ago
@Producerdirector2 Yes but if you don't have enough money for one of those fancy cleaning machines?, what could you do?, fuck your self?
overclockeador 2 weeks ago
I use gasoline on my records. Then I slap them off the table.
theotherone58 4 months ago
@theotherone58 for reals? i light them up and throw them like frisbees haha...
vintagevinylnvoluify 1 month ago
Excuse me, Don't apologize for stuttering.
3033450 5 months ago
How expensive would this be ...Ridic
cyrustom 6 months ago
3:21 Looks good enough to eat! Yum yum!
totalrandomcrap 7 months ago 3
Comment removed
vintagevinylnvoluify 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@totalrandomcrap haha talk about the icing on the cake ....
vintagevinylnvoluify 1 month ago
@hippieMANIAK That's what my dad always said to me! I always made sure never to say that around him ever again! However that one MAD Magazine trick record had more than one groove.
totalrandomcrap 7 months ago
Interesting.... I think I'll give this a shot.
RCALennon 8 months ago
@hippieMANIAK
2 grooves usually...
finsaah 8 months ago
@hippieMANIAK lol Thanks and good point. Just one long-ass groove.
Yeah, I very rarely have to do this. I usually only use a brush or an anti-static cloth for normal, every day use and record cleaning solution and a sterile pad for little dustier jobs. It's only when I come across a record that's so dirty, usually involving mildew, where no other method at my disposal will get the job done.
jasonmit 9 months ago
You Need to show the record playing before you glue it up, then afterwards to reveal the results.
playguitarlars 1 year ago
I agree... do it all the time!
gridslayer70 1 year ago
PVA wood glue used on a standard vinyl record CANNOT cause damage because the PVA can't bind to the vinyl. Whether it's "designed" to clean records or not, there's ample proof that it works and causes no damage whatsoever, let alone "irreparable" damage. If you want proof, check out the forums at audiokarma - there's 2 years worth of posts in a single forum thread about this, and the only instances where a record was damaged was due to a non-recommended glue type being used.
standishbear 1 year ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Wood glue is not designed for restoring Vinyl Records. It should NEVER be used on rare records, or records with musical or cultural significance, as the wood glue is capapble of causing irreparable damage in a number ways.
mitch19636 1 year ago
Comment removed
chupathingy99 1 year ago
@chupathingy99 I never tried it but I wouldn't recommend it.
jasonmit 1 year ago