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                                                    | Paul S San Diego, California, USA
 Posts 2,795
 Joined on 10-12-2006
 
 
                                                            
                                                                | Post #: | 5 |  
                                                                | Post ID: | 24920 |  
                                                                | Reply to: | 24919 |  
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                                                    | I think most plastics have trouble with UV, and some fungi are pretty tough, anyway.  The "idea" for me is to put the LP in a machine, turn it on, and return soon to a clean, dry LP that's ready to play on my turntable in my high-demands hi-fi system.  If "they" can build cars that drive themselves on our highways, certainly someone could come up with a better record cleaning machine.  Obviously, there just isn't enough money "invested" in hi-fi to attract and retain the personnel necessary to do a given job.  It's been like this since I can remember.  Oddly, there was once a ton of money invested in "records"; only, the money in records was the music (OK, the rights to the music...), not the records, themselves, nor the gear to play the records, once a given market was saturated. 
 The only time I used heat (the oven) to flatten an LP was many years ago.  Back then I used a Pickering (transcription) cartridge in a SME 3009 on a Rek-O-Kut TT, Leak Point One 6L6 amp driving modded Altec A-7 speakers.  I did not perceive any problem from the treatment, but I never did it again.  Now I mostly cull LPs before I buy them, and I use a vacuum holddown TT (SOTA Star).  Anything that won't flatten goes to the DAV (or it just sits there on my records shelves...).
 
 
 
 Paul S
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