Wow, you have really hit your stride on this channel. You found a great niche in these experiments for vinyl fanatics. And the humour and tone really makes it fun.
Keep an air purifier in you listening room and keep the records in a ricepaper mofi sleeve and I don't have static problems. Plus I have a thick acrylic platter
Great video as usual. Your reasoned approach and articulate manner is a plus. Please keep up the good work. I solved my static problem. Before I play the record, I clean with ‘Spin Clean’ using only distilled H2O, then vacuum with ‘Nitty Gritty’ machine. Something about the water bath works to reduce static, I think. My turntable is grounded to earth via wire and stake in the... Earth. I had snap crackle and pop. No more static. If I need to soap the record, I use ‘Disc Doctor’ brushes and solution, then rinse and dry using the aforementioned process. Thanks for a clever tee shirt.
Thanks for doing this Chris. I did ask you if you could do this and you weren’t to sure if you would. I have friends that use the hair dryer and I’ve always wondered if it worked. Now we know. Very cool.
Cool test. One tip Id have for the method is to measure the record from top to bottom instead of side to side as your thumb is usually very close to the last reading.
In theory this doesn't seem like such a bad idea to me, as the deionizer in the hair dryer is there to discharge static from hair to keep it from drying frizzy. There could be variables though with the hair dryer used and how strong the deionizer is. I have an old one around that has a setting to turn the heater completely off, and the ionizer on and off, so I might have to try it and see if I get any outstanding results, I also have a deionizing air filter that noticeably reduces the static in my house that i could leave the record in front of to test as well, but for now I have been happy with the plasma lighter method you introduced (cant thank you enough for that btw :)
Have a look at a iWave-r ion device for hvac purposes. Part number is 4900-20 Small, no noise at all, it might be the perfect solution to record static!
I would’ve liked to seen you give more than 15 seconds to this effort. Not sure how you arrived at that is the magic number but seems like more time might have more results. That said I live in Denver Colorado where it’s always very dry and staticky and it makes me crazy. And my best solution to dealing with static has been to run a humidifier when I’m playing my records.
One other note about static on records. I’m so frustrated when I get a new album and it’s even a nice pressing but it arrives in a paper sleeve and I have the nightmare of trying to remove it from the sleeve without scratching it. If it’s just a plain paper sleeve and not part of the packaging I will sometimes cut it open after trying to humidify the record and the paper
aw man I wanted that to work! Static becomes such an issue here in England that I have to switch carts during the winter months cos my favourite Nagaoka cart just doesn't play well with high static. Even my Milty cant save it. Actually, breathing on the cart before needle dropping works (a temporary transfer of humidity) but as pointed out by my other-half the act of doing it looks weird so I don't do it any more. 😂
I've been researching static on lps when my tt starting popping loudly a couple of times a side. It's very low humidity where I live. These static pops were so loud. I replaced the rubber mat with a Bernie's mat, still popped. I finally came across a solution and no more pops. I spray a soft brush with distilled water and run it a revoltion or so on the lp.
@@thevinylattack You misunderstand. I do clean my lps, thoroughly. But before I play a lp, I use the lightly dampened brush for a revolution or 2 and that seems to have taken care of the static pops.
Love the channel, i recommend that you do a video on Meguiar's PlastX to remove vinyl cancer (where the plastic inner has interacted with the record surface and made it go hazy.) i found it helps with not only physical appearance but also sound quality. was in total doubt before trying but i found it did work.
Interesting video. I'm guessing the deionizer is probably designed to reduce as much static as it would generate without it. I know it's not the same thing but my 130ft long wire antenna can give you quite a shock on a windy day.
Ah, and my journey to get rid of static for free continues... In the meanwhile: What are your thoughts on wet playing records? do you think that might be a valuable asset in the war against ßtâtįć? and if you somehow don't know what I'm talking about, here some links: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jGgiCwWsktk.html ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-eHMEj3Jv7F8.html
Open up the hair dryer and see what's different from a regular hair dryer? Maybe wet the record down and dry it with the dryer. Might drive off more static charge? Interesting static meter! Is there a video just on that? And yes, I do own the zerostat gun, would love to learn more about what it does....
@@thevinylattack It's OK if you don't know the difference, but your viewers might! If the right person sees the inside, then the mystery could be solved. That's what the youtube community is for.
It will always read less toward your body, yes. If you rotate the record (or measure vertically instead of horizontally as I've been doing) the readings are consistent across the board.
Maybe someone can explain why your static charge readings always decrease as you test across the record in the manner you show. At least with higher charges the charge should evenly distribute across the dielectric surface. But I wonder if the decreasing charge you see on the "unprocessed" surface isn't an indication that your hand or the meter itself isn't discharging the static electricity a bit as you move across.
Can you just rub a good dryer sheet on the edge and middle of the record a few times to eliminate static or just sit a record on a dryer sheet for 20 minutes not rubbing it but just sitting . I mean dryer sheets are designed to eliminate static
Yeah funny his would be a beard dryer lol. You mentioned that rip off Chinese ez and I was wondering if car polish would be good for removing those surface scratches on an lp that don’t effect play (like those from a paper sleeve) but look ugly. Anyone tried this?
It kills me how you are conducting these tests. Every single time you do it differently, whether it be being earthed, handling the record, or tearing the paper sleeve open. Imagine the record as a clock. I've watched multiple tests across multiple videos where you do things like running the initial test running from 10 o'clock to 4 o'clock, place the record down, pick it up and run the test a second time (8 o'clock to 2 o'clock), run a trial, and then take a reading from 9 o'clock to 3 o'clock. Science is about consistency. If you placed the record on the turntable (no more physical interaction), tested, did what ever miracle cure you are trialing, and then tested again you would get consistent data that isn't corrupted by repeated handling and interference. Haven't you noticed that there is regularly a lower reading as you get closer to your left hand, regardless of the record's alignment? You could also consider adding the numbers together to identify a "final score" for the record (before and after), that way you can then identify a percentage increase/decrease to be able to determine what technique is better.
I'm always grounded, and tearing the paper isn't doing much of anything on the rare occasions I do it. The consistency lies in the direction in which I read numbers. I follow the same path using the label as a guide. Testing on the table is useless because the static bleeds off into the table and then comes right back as the record is lifted. The number gets lower near my hand because I'm grounded. But because that's consistent (and the readings are too), to me it's a non-issue. A percentage number is a pretty good idea. I'll see about giving that a go in the future.