Anyone experienced with Sound Guard?


Recently someone on Vinyl Asylum reported wonderful condition/sonics on some used LPs that had been treated with Sound Guard. I was in the hobby years ago when SG was popular but never tried it. Now my curiosity is up.

Looking through my audio junk stash, I found a SG Record Preservation Kit I must have acquired in trade years ago. This includes a bottle of the SG fluid (80% full) and the blue felt applicator pad. Before I begin experimenting, thought I would ask a few questions.

1. If you have used Sound Guard, what are your impressions of its value?

2. Does anyone have a copy of the application instructions they could scan and E-mail to me? I'm wondering if the fluid should be applied to the record and spread with the pad or applied to the pad then wiped on the record?

3. A note on the bottle refers to the spray pump which I don't have. Anyone still have an old, empty bottle who would be willing to give me their pump?

Thanks for any help.
pryso
I tried SG like all the others and found it to be worthless. Save the brush, ditch the SG.
Not on my LP's, like they said ^^^

Optimal LP playback is achieved when the playback stylus traces the identical path as was traced by the cutting stylus. Gunking up the groove surfaces with *anything* necessarily interferes with that goal. One good look at LP grooves and a modern stylus at 200X magnification or better will convince you that *nothing* is too fine to interfere with that interface.

No Sound Guard. No Groove Glide (yuck). No Last. Just use the best available cleaning regimen, which Rushton already described, and a well made, well maintained RCM.

P.S. Don't even save the brush. It's already contaminated with old Sound Guard. Toss the lot.
Wow, thanks guys.

Most questions in audio result in all kinds of answers with very little consensus. This appears to be the exception. Believe I'll "dispose of" the fluid and find another use for the pad.