I have just spoken with Duane Goldman (The Disc Doctor) who called on a different topic.
Duane has spent his life studying record cleaning as a chemist. Duane mixes record cleaner used by the Library of Congress and other archiving organizations. He s VERY familiar with the vinyl compounds and record material contaminants as well as foreign materials that find their way into record and lacquer grooves. I asked Duane specifically about using isopropyl alcohol on vinyl.
Duane contributed the following FACTS to the discussion, but won't post. If you want to confirm this, just call him and ask for FACTS about using isopropyl alcohol on vinyl records.
Without posting his string of "colorful descriptions" of those who would ruin their records with Isopropyl alcohol, he indicated that the use of 0% of isopropyl alcohol is the acceptable threshold, but not more than 0%.
NO ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL ON RECORDS. This issue was resolved in the late 70's but some people still choose to ignore the actual scientific facts related to this topic.
Isopropyl alcohol does not dissolve the specific foreign material in the grooves which is the mold release and associated mildew.
I described the @invictus005 method using cotton balls and 91% isopropyl alcohol. He said it would leach out the plasticizers which can never be replaced. Use
NO ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL ON RECORDS.
So the readers of this thread can either take the word of a chemist who has been studying record and lacquer surfaces his entire life or @invictus005 who is someone who can't even identify what the material is that he is trying to remove.