Why are record cleaners so expensive?


Full disclosure: I have only the Spin-Clean record cleaner and a Hunt EDA brush to clean my vinyl, but as someone who's been in the digital side of audiophilia for decades, and as someone who knows how much gear can get in any dedicated hobby, I'm still curious as to why a high end vinyl cleaner can cost more than three grand.

I'm not disputing the price; after all, Smith said that something's worth whatever someone pays for it. Moreover, a high end record cleaner might be able to do things to vinyl that nothing else can. Still, paying three grand for an Audio Desk cleaner seems a bit out of reason. $3K can buy a good set of speakers; a hand-made fly-fishing rod based on your height and weight and arm length; two weeks at a Fijian resort for two; a custom-made suit from an Italian mill. So why is a glorified vacuum cleaner $3K?

Again, not flaming, just curious. Enlighten me?

s
128x128simao
samzx12, I hear you about Harleys. But FWIW, I ride a Ducati 916 for sport and a Ninja 1000ABS for touring-- both of which require more than a yardstick to measure tolerances.  Ditto the quest for clean sounding records.
Cleeds what I am saying spending that much on a cleaner is just nuts. But of course if you can afford a gazillion dollar cleaner and it makes you feel good then so be it but there has to a little voice in your head saying this is ridiculous and I have to not be of sound mind lol. :)

Dgarretson cool bikes. One of my riding buddies has a Ninja 1000 but not with ABS.  I have a Triumph Speed Triple. Before that it was a Honda CBR1000rr. Not sure where you live but I am in Lexington KY so not too far from the Smokies :)
I don't hear that voice. I do like vintage bikes, though. Gave up riding a few years ago. Mostly had Italian bikes, though I did have one Harley- a V-Rod, which was a great motor in search of a decent bike. The chassis flexed, the brakes didn't work very well (I was told that's typical for HD), so I installed Brembos on it and stripped it down to a bobber.  It was actually a nice bike at cruising speeds, heavy, low, easy to ride, but not very nimble. If I were going to analogize the cleaning machines I have here to bikes, the Monks is almost like a Brough- dated in design, but still performs at the top tier. Only difference, it doesn't leak oil. :) 

samzx12:
Oh man, now slaw knows where you live!

dgarretson:
Had my 916 stolen 6 years ago. You're not riding mine, are you? ;-)


DG, you are going to LOVE that Elmasonic. Nothing like German precision, here as elsewhere. I clean for 12 minutes at 80 KH, more for the very dirty. Enjoy!

Steve, it's very simple to test: clean a record the conventional way, dip it half into the US tank, cook it for an hour, rinse, dry, and play. The sound will change dramatically about every second. If you prefer the sound from the US side, you have your answer. This I have done - and the answer, to me, is obvious.