Anyone tryed cleaning records with wood glue?

About 30 years or so ago there was a product that was designed to be used this way.
Maybe you mean "Discofilm" ?

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That was the stuff I was trying to remember. It was made by Empire I think. They made cartridges as well. I’d guess that crappy white glue used by kids might work too. It would be interesting to look at the peeled piece to look for the noisy bits😂.
 
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Thank you all for more anwsers. All has been taken into consideration.
The glue is on:
20221214_105012.jpg

Not too relaxing job to do, but it's managable. My shaky hands didn't help tho.
I applied most of the glue while spinning and was left with a few low spots that were filled stationary.
First coat was about 70/30 mix, I mixed 50/50, but it seemend to me that it's too liquidy and was affraid that it would pour off the edge.
Second coat was just glue.
 
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There used to be a product in my country for peel-off disc cleaning. It was a pink liquid. An applicator came with it for even distribution. I heard the same substance was used in the cosmetics industry as face mask for women. I suppose it is also PVA based.
I also tried wood glue. The trick is in the thickness. It is easier to peel off if you use pieces of adhesive tape at the edges. Any glue remaining in the grooves can also be removed by adhesive tape.
The biggest issue I had with wood glue is that the disc gets static charge at the moment when you peel off the dried glue. So the disc attracts dust immediately.
 
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Never tought of that.
Will try it.
I ripped the record before apllying glue and will rip it once more after I remove the glue, to compare the effect.

Other side will be ripped as is, then after dusting it off with air and finaly the glue trick.
If you're going to dust with air make sure your source is completely clean otherwise you'll just be firing high speed microdust at your LP...
 
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There used to be a product in my country for peel-off disc cleaning. It was a pink liquid. An applicator came with it for even distribution. I heard the same substance was used in the cosmetics industry as face mask for women. I suppose it is also PVA based.
I also tried wood glue. The trick is in the thickness. It is easier to peel off if you use pieces of adhesive tape at the edges. Any glue remaining in the grooves can also be removed by adhesive tape.
The biggest issue I had with wood glue is that the disc gets static charge at the moment when you peel off the dried glue. So the disc attracts dust immediately.
Good to know.
That face mask should also do the trick.

Thanks for the tips.
Static... I hate it, I had bought 2 brand new records to this day and both are still full of it.
 
I was referring not to an actual compressor, what I meant is those cans of gas compressed, I don't know exactly what the hell they contain inside. I used the to clean PC monitors and keyboards time ago.
I was warned off using even canned air to clean the internals of my camera because of the potential for firing dust into the image sensor or simply embedding it further into the camera. But like a lot of this stuff YMMV and of course I've no personal experience, I just dutifully followed the advice from someone I respected 🙂
 
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Thank you all for more anwsers. All has been taken into consideration.
The glue is on:
View attachment 1119513

Not too relaxing job to do, but it's managable. My shaky hands didn't help tho.
I applied most of the glue while spinning and was left with a few low spots that were filled stationary.
First coat was about 70/30 mix, I mixed 50/50, but it seemend to me that it's too liquidy and was affraid that it would pour off the edge.
Second coat was just glue.
Looking forward to hearing back from you. Like I was saying earlier, it's a long process but in the end, out of everything I have available to clean a record, that was by far the best solution. The 2 I've done using the wood glue are super quiet now, and they were basically unlistenable before (even after a spin clean).

I'm really curious about the ultrasonic cleaners. But a lot of these guys are nuts, I'm reading they'll first use a brush to get dust off, then run it thru a their $500 Pro-Ject record cleaner, then final clean it with a $2k ultrasonic cleaner. I'm not spending $2,500 on record cleaning machines, for that much money I could easily replace the few records I have that might need a deep clean.
 
I was referring not to an actual compressor, what I meant is those cans of gas compressed, I don't know exactly what the hell they contain inside. I used the to clean PC monitors and keyboards time ago.
That would be better yes. I was never worried about shop air, only that there is no water / oil in lines for the painting or sandblasting. But with records is another story.
 
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I was warned off using even canned air to clean the internals of my camera because of the potential for firing dust into the image sensor or simply embedding it further into the camera. But like a lot of this stuff YMMV and of course I've no personal experience, I just dutifully followed the advice from someone I respected 🙂
As an afterthought it is really better to avoid it.
 
Looking forward to hearing back from you. Like I was saying earlier, it's a long process but in the end, out of everything I have available to clean a record, that was by far the best solution. The 2 I've done using the wood glue are super quiet now, and they were basically unlistenable before (even after a spin clean).

I'm really curious about the ultrasonic cleaners. But a lot of these guys are nuts, I'm reading they'll first use a brush to get dust off, then run it thru a their $500 Pro-Ject record cleaner, then final clean it with a $2k ultrasonic cleaner. I'm not spending $2,500 on record cleaning machines, for that much money I could easily replace the few records I have that might need a deep clean.
I will see if it will be dry enough tommorow, if not I will post the results the day after.

I'm looking into ultrasonic cleaners too, but if I do, I will buy something cheap. Around 150EUR and I would also use it for car parts and such, so it weights the investment better.
 
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I will see if it will be dry enough tommorow, if not I will post the results the day after.

I'm looking into ultrasonic cleaners too, but if I do, I will buy something cheap. Around 150EUR and I would also use it for car parts and such, so it weights the investment better.
It should definitely be dry enough today, and you'll want to be somewhat cautious because there is a line between peeling it off too soon and waiting too long. The window is probably... dry enough that it's not liquid anymore, but still at least a little pliable. Waiting too long will make the glue brittle and harder to get off the record, IIRC it was around 6 hours.
 
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It should definitely be dry enough today, and you'll want to be somewhat cautious because there is a line between peeling it off too soon and waiting too long. The window is probably... dry enough that it's not liquid anymore, but still at least a little pliable. Waiting too long will make the glue brittle and harder to get off the record, IIRC it was around 6 hours.
Ok, will get home in about an hour and see if it looks ready.
 
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