@jjbeason14: I would encourage you to do a pre-cleaning of the LP before immersing it in the Spin Clean tank, especially if you buy used records. Why, you ask? By running tap water over the LP in the sink (at the pre-cleaning stage tap water will suffice) and gently "washing" the record with a paint trim pad and mild detergent (read all about it in the Neil Antin-penned treatise referred to above, the Bible of record cleaning), you are removing at least some of any large particles of dust and debris present on the PVC (and in the LP’s grooves). The record will therefore not shed it’s now-removed dirt into the water in the Spin Clean, preventing that water from becoming contaminated. Various clear plastic label protectors are available on ebay and Amazon, the one I bought having a handle with which to hold the LP whilst cleaning.
If you want to get really nutty, buy a second Spin Clean, adding a couple of drops of a surfactant (Talas Tergitol 15-S-9) and cleaning agent (Alconox Liquinox) to the distilled water in the first, pure distilled water in the second for a final rinse. If you can spend a couple hundred bucks more, some people prefer to suck the water off the clean-but-wet LP with a Record Doctor vacuum machine (the cheapest available), rather than leaving the LP to air dry (unless you’re room is very dust-free, you know what leaving an LP out will result in: dust on the record).