[78-L] Repairing cracked records
Michael Biel
mbiel at mbiel.com
Mon Oct 4 13:44:54 PDT 2010
The wax method won't work because it is being used for the exact
opposite purpose -- to fill the space in a widened crack of the entire
record. You have a crack in a thin top layer that probably has curled
upwards a bit to create an uneven surface. If the lacquer can be
pressed down then you might be able to use a THIN glue to hold it down,
such as crazy glue. But you have to be careful because the repair can't
be undone.
Re-record the disc first. Of course, you should have already
re-recorded it when the lacquer started cracking.
Mike BIel mbiel at mbiel.com
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [78-L] Repairing cracked records
From: Sammy Jones <sjones69 at bellsouth.net>
Date: Mon, October 04, 2010 4:24 pm
To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com
I wonder if this method will work with a lacquer disc that has a lacquer
crack. I've got a Lux Radio Theater show from the '30s that has a
lacquer crack for the first five or so minutes. It will not track over
the crack unless I use my finger to nudge the stylus. That gets tiresome
after 33 1/3 times every minute for five minutes!
Obviously the metal substrate won't soften as a shellac will, but the
grease pencil part sounds interesting...
Sammy Jones
Malcolm wrote:
I had been holding some other similarly
> cracked, but
> common records for awhile to test on and finally came up
> with a decent
> method using a heat gun, grease pencil and razor.
>
> First I would lay the record on a flat surface with the
> heat gun on one hand
> and the grease pencil in the other. The heat gun will
> soften the pencil
> enough to drag along the surface of the crack. Be as
> careful as you can not
> to get too much of the pencil wax into the actual grooves
> as you can easily
> make it noisier than it was with the exposed crack.
> After I have covered the crack, I shave the excess with a
> straight razor to
> get the wax & the top of grooves at the same level.
> I then apply some more light heat to slightly soften the
> wax again & bring
> it over to an old victrola to re-cut the groove through the
> wax.
> Don't use too much heat at this last step or it will melt
> the wax into the
> grooves causing noisy playback. Once the wax has dried,
> there is no need to
> use glue.
>
> Of course it will not play like a new record, but it will
> turn a nasty
> thumping crack into a lightly ticking one. This also only
> really works if
> the crack is big! If you can not see light through the
> crack, applying the
> wax will only make it worse.
>
> I also tried epoxy once (read some other online tutorials)
> and completely
> destroyed the record I was working on - so I don't
> recommend it! The wax is
> somewhat forgiving & epoxy is not!
>
> Malcolm in GA
>
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