Vintage HiFi Audio Forum
Audio Discussion => General Discussion => Topic started by: scorpio333 on November 25, 2018, 04:41:23 PM
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The Music Direct catalog arrived. Before I pitched it, figured I get a laugh at some of the outrageous offerings, you know like a $595 USB cable. I came across the Flux Hifi Ultrasonic Electronic Stylus Cleaner for a mere $120. I've got a feeling the opinions on this will be all over the place, but we'd all agree a clean stylus is important.
I use a tiny stylus brush often and magic eraser every now and then. Seems to do the trick for me so I'm sticking with it.
What do you guys think, snake oil or ???
https://www.musicdirect.com/analog-accessories/flux-hifi-sonic-electronic-stylus-cleaner (https://www.musicdirect.com/analog-accessories/flux-hifi-sonic-electronic-stylus-cleaner)
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The Music Direct catalog arrived. Before I pitched it, figured I get a laugh at some of the outrageous offerings, you know like a $595 USB cable. I came across the Flux Hifi Ultrasonic Electronic Stylus Cleaner for a mere $120. I've got a feeling the opinions on this will be all over the place, but we'd all agree a clean stylus is important.
I use a tiny stylus brush often and magic eraser every now and then. Seems to do the trick for me so I'm sticking with it.
What do you guys think, snake oil or ???
https://www.musicdirect.com/analog-accessories/flux-hifi-sonic-electronic-stylus-cleaner (https://www.musicdirect.com/analog-accessories/flux-hifi-sonic-electronic-stylus-cleaner)
The Soundsmith recommends using blu-tack, but I ignore that advice and use the traditional brush. This looks like a valid application of ultrasonic cleaning to me, not snake oil!
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those first came out in the mid/ late 70s and where very popular until owners started to have problems with their stylus/ styli. Then they quickly disappeared from the market. Not sure what changed with the new models but I'm happy with my Discwasher stylus brush, magic eraser and Zerodust.
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I would not trust an ultrasonic stylus cleaner. It might loosen the diamond in the cantilever. ....Just a thought.
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I use a cube of Magic Eraser. Ultrasonic is great for vinyl as it is too soft for aggressive cleaning, but I'm pretty sure a diamond won't have issue with the very mild abrasive of Melamine. I've been using it for probably five years now without issue.
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I agree not snake oil, just overkill.
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I used the traditional brush just last night. Was listening to a Roscoe Mitchell lp that was sounding disappointingly fuzzy. Big dust ball on stylus from the previous record.
Also have a DiscWasher stylus brush with the mirror on the flipside that is currently MIA. ( Not that my eyes can see that close these days.)
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Stylus cleaning isn't for dustballs. Zerostats and carbon fiber brushes are for dust. Stylus cleaning is for build up of debris.
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I have read that getting the stylus tip wet is not a good thing. I use a brush or Blue Tac. I also purchase a little puck type device that has a tacky gel, similar to Blue Tac in function that seems to work well. I don't remember what it's called, or who makes it (everything is still packed in boxes)..
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Blue tac makes me nervous around a stylus. A friend swears by the gummy stuff that holds credit card to paper you get in the mail. I have big clumsy fingers and if something sticky gets stuck I'll likely wreck it doing some kind of crazy "surgery".
As far as liquids go, I'd be nervous about contaminating the cantilever. With some of the exotic metals used for cantilevers it would suck to have it react with a mineral in the cleaning agent.