Dear Mo-fi,
You must remember that 70s & 80s were dominated by Linn's philosophy and they advocated using the stylus to clean records then brushing it off with stylus cleaner after it had collected! ;^)
I must confess to some scepticism about fingerprints causing extreme damage to a stylus though? Any fingerprint won't likely penetrate beyond the outermost groove surface and the domain of the stylus lies within the deeper part of the groove? Small bits of paper get deflected without even being noticed (although I think it's best to dust them off first). The acid test would be whether there is any accompanying sound of impact from the fingerprint(??).
By contrast, a carbon fibre brush when applied to the stylus will scare the proverbials out of you if the volume is even within 10db of your normal listening level, so if anything I'd be more concerned about the rigorous nature of the brush rather than any mild contaminants?
One of the great things about hifi is that we can celebrate our different approaches to each and every problem and it's always interesting to hear others experiences.
Kind regards,
You must remember that 70s & 80s were dominated by Linn's philosophy and they advocated using the stylus to clean records then brushing it off with stylus cleaner after it had collected! ;^)
I must confess to some scepticism about fingerprints causing extreme damage to a stylus though? Any fingerprint won't likely penetrate beyond the outermost groove surface and the domain of the stylus lies within the deeper part of the groove? Small bits of paper get deflected without even being noticed (although I think it's best to dust them off first). The acid test would be whether there is any accompanying sound of impact from the fingerprint(??).
By contrast, a carbon fibre brush when applied to the stylus will scare the proverbials out of you if the volume is even within 10db of your normal listening level, so if anything I'd be more concerned about the rigorous nature of the brush rather than any mild contaminants?
One of the great things about hifi is that we can celebrate our different approaches to each and every problem and it's always interesting to hear others experiences.
Kind regards,