This might help you with static on vinyl.
mapleshade static draining brush. This drains static away. Other brushes move it around.
I love mine.
mapleshade static draining brush. This drains static away. Other brushes move it around.
I love mine.
Vinyl woes / cartridge upgrade
Thanks all for the replies. Mike, the AT-VM95SH looks good. Or, maybe the 95ML for a bit less. I have been researching the Microline and Shibata types and the shape seems to make sense. The Gallos still sounding great BTW! The Mapleshade brush is interesting, seriously considering it. There is a 30 day return policy. Hopefully it works better than the carbon fiber brushes and the Zerostat. Honestly now, is the Zerostat a scam? It does nothing for my vinyl that I can tell. Maybe Mapleshade will do a trade-up for my Zerostat. ;-) |
Yes the Zerostat is a scam and you are absolutely right. The static electricity is being created while the record is playing by the friction of the stylus in the groove. You have to discharge the static while the record is playing and the best way to do that is this
https://www.sleevecityusa.com/Antistatic-Record-Cleaning-Arm-p/tac-01.htm It will also clear any incidental dust out of the way. If you use a dust cover and this device your new records will stay clean forever and you will never need to clean them. You might have to clean your stylus once in a blue moon. In my experience moving coil cartridges do not extenuate the pops and ticks as much when used with a high quality phono amp. Stylus "jitter" is a marketing term used by Peter Ledermann. The appropriate term is miss tracking which is painfully audible. Irregardless you are going to get the occasional pop, tick, stuck needle etc. It is just the nature of the game but on good pressings they are surprisingly rare and there is a magic you do not get with digital. |