iSonic® P4875II+MVR10-Pro Motorized Ultrasonic Vinyl Record Cleaner with Filter and Spin Drying

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2022
  • Popular iSonic Ultrasonic Vinyl Record Cleaner with the new pro set of accessories that upgrade it to a professional level. The pro set accessories includes a 1-micron in-water filter and a step motor programmed to run at 10RPM for cleaning and up to 600RPM for spin drying. The in-water filter is plug-in and play, no external hookups are needed. Spin drying is faster and quieter than fan or vacuum drying. The set can be retro fitted to the existing iSonic ultrasonic record cleaners. It also includes a new set of LP label protectors with double sided silicone gaskets, 2 new brackets, a centering gauge to position the baskets precisely to reduce shaking during high speed motor rotations, a 24V DC adapter with split cables to feed to the motor and the filter, a high quality microfiber cleaning cloth which can be used to wipe the records if needed and to polish silver frontal plates on vintage audio equipment. The ultrasonic cleaner has a special control panel designed for vinyl record cleaning. It has 4 direct timer buttons for 5 to 15 minutes, a heater button to turn on the heater. The heater is preset at 95F/35C. Higher temperature will warp records. 35K ultrasonic frequency. 3 powerful stack transducers for excellent and proven cleaning results. The sound effects are restored to new record level. 10 LPs can be cleaned at once. Mix and match of 10" and 12" LPs are not a problem. Less records can be cleaned with addition of spacers and extra label protectors. After cleaning, drain water out before spin drying which takes about 5 to 10 minutes depending on the room conditions. A bottle of cleaning solution concentrate is included. Only 1-2 capfuls are needed for a tank of water. Tap water can be used.
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ความคิดเห็น • 6

  • @mrhoffame
    @mrhoffame ปีที่แล้ว +4

    First and foremost this thing works AWESOME for cleaning records on the deepest levels. ...and I'm not talking about cleaning records you found in a box at a garage sell . I mean it will lol, but I"m talking more about that brand new record you bought and looks glossy mint and yet you still hear some light pops in the deadwax when you first played it. Even after cleaning it with a brush/solution or a spin clean. This thing gets into the deapest levels of the grooves and pulls out stuff that you couldn't even imagine was there. You will find this thing will not remove a fingerprint. You still may have to wipe that with a microfiber cloth, but this will clean inside the grooves to where you records will sound like hey made a full grade upgrade. VG+ to EX+ playback. I'm a very anal collector. Over 90% of my 3000+ collection is EX to NM grade. Less than 350 of them are VG+. I'm obsessive on collectable condition and yet this thing took my collection to a new level in terms of play quality. It made most of my deadwax play like "cd deadwax" silent. Worth every freakn' penny and I ran ever single one of my records through it. Nothing now comes into my collection not matter how NM or brand new it is without being ran through this.
    The only thing I would say I don't think is worth it here is the spin dry option. Draining that doesn't make much sense just to spin dry because you can get the same fully dry effect by putting the records in a drying rack and simply setting a table top fan on the table right beside it. Totally dries in the same 10-15mins without the back and forth of draining and refilling. ...AND the time you don't spend draining and spinning you could already have the next batch of records being cleaned. As I said I just cleaned over 3000 albums in the first 30 days of having this thing so over 100 records per day lol.... I learned a lot fast lol.

    • @iSonicInc
      @iSonicInc  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thank you so much for your very positive and thorough reviews. Regarding spin drying vs. fan drying, we have conducted experiments and found out that fan drying is much slower than spin drying. It's also much quieter than vacuum drying. That's why we chose spin drying eventually. Regarding draining water for spin cleaning, we had two options. If we choose not draining water first, then customers have to have two identical ultrasonic vinyl record cleaners or at least an identical housing and move the motor with the records to the second unit for spin drying. This will increase customers' cost and the space required is also doubled. In the end, we chose the current method of draining water before spin drying. For customers with a lot of records to clean regularly, getting the second unit or possibly a housing is still an option. We'd love to hear customers' feedback like yours in order to improve on the products.

    • @4431charlie
      @4431charlie 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I love the spin drying, only takes a minute to drain the tank@@iSonicInc

    • @iSonicInc
      @iSonicInc  6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks! FYI, We have a new pump station for the PRO systems available now. It drains out water and pump it back with a flick of the switch. It makes the spin drying process much easier. It works for both the original P4875(II or NH)+MVR10-PRO (with a new set of the ss. plates on the brackets), CS6.1-PRO and CS6.2-PRO. 100% of water goes through the inline cartridge filter on the pump station. It's better than the in-water filter in this sense. It also avoids interference between 8-10 LPs and the in-water filter for CS6.1-PRO and CS6.2-PRO. See the video at th-cam.com/video/JJ5j8ZwSfRI/w-d-xo.html @@4431charlie

  • @DjRay1967
    @DjRay1967 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I cant seem to find anywhere the answer to this question i have. After how many records do you discard the water mixed with the iSonic surfactant?

    • @iSonicInc
      @iSonicInc  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      About 100-150 records. PRO has an in-water filter that helps to keep water clean. The new pump station is even better as 100% water goes through the cartridge filter on the pump station when water is pumped back to the unit. It's better than the in-water filter in this sense. Either filter will extend the use of the same water. Also good tap water is better than distilled water. You don't have to rinse it with tap water as long as you don't see watermarks on the records. Distilled water tends to leave a film of solution on the records. It also has tendency to generate static.