Post-Katrina salvage of audio gear and software


First, I consider myself fortunate to have made it out of our downtown New Orleans hotel-shelter with my elderly parents and Brittany spaniel. I am very grateful to the hotel staff, national guard, friends, family and kind strangers I have encountered along the way. I also want to thank the audiogoners who have made and encouraged contributions to Katrina relief efforts. My home in the Lakeview section of New Orleans was inundated with aproximately 10 feet of brackish water after the levee adjacent to the 17st Street Canal broke on August 29th. Inside was enough gear for two tube-based and one solid state system. At present, it is unclear when I will be allowed to return to inspect damage. What should I and others similarly situated do with our audio equipment and software? I am thinking that we should consider all the audio gear a total loss with the possible exception of the cables. Any thoughts about this matter and what we should do with our vinyl and CD collections would be much appreciated. David
mrwigglewm
Hello David!

Great to hear you and your parents and Trixie made it out okay. I feared the worst for your house, and from what you describe that seems to be the case. I'm still kind of shell-shocked by it all, and I wasn't even there.

Regarding the post-flood prognosis for your equipment, my suggestion would be to give Richard a call. I'm e-mailing you his cell phone number through your Audiogon identity; I lost your e-mail address. If you can't get your e-mail that's sent through Audiogon for some reason, then e-mail me at audiokinesis@yahoo.com.

Your vinyl might well be salvageable. I'm thinking a good soaking in a mild detergent solution to loosen the paper as the first step. Alan T. might be a good resource on this, but I don't have his contact information either. Richard might. Anyway, you'll probaby have some mildew in the grooves, and Kevin Blair of Buggtussel sells a record-cleaning enzyme that is supposed to work especially well on mold and mildew. I'll put on my dealer hat and give him a holler. Here's a link to his mold-eating enzyme page:

http://www.buggtussel.com/vinylzyme.asp

If you want to call me, my New Orleans-based cell phone isn't working reliably yet but you can reach me at (208) 852-2610.

Lori also says hello.

Duke
Hello David,

First, my thoughts and prayers are with you and all those about you!

It may be a long shot, but the electronics may be salvageable. I'm not too sure, but since the components are air tight then they should be water tight also. Dismantle as much as possible and flush out all the silt and salt with plenty of fresh water. Use reagent grade methanol or isopropyl alcohol to flush/rinse out the water and blow dry with canned air. Water damage should clean up far easier than heat and smoke damage I would expect!!! Once the units are cleaned up you can decide whether sending them back to the manufacturer(s) for inspection/repair is worthwhile...

Don't give up hope just yet!!!
Dont let any bone heads tell you to give up on your gear, maybe it will be ok and maybe it wont, but for those who suggest you give up without trying I would suggest putting yourself in others shoes. God Bless you guys and I hope you can get back to some normal life as soon as possible.
I feel for you dude. I used to live over by Elysian Fields and Robert E-Lee. I've been homesick for New Orleasn since the day i moved out 15 yrs ago. I was just back in April taking time off of doing some Hurricane related work in Pennsacola. Bummer to think of all that was ruined. One can only hope the city's groove wasn't included in the big list. A bunch of my friends in the city and Slidell have had better days. One of them playes for the Iguanas and i think he was on tour during the Hurricane. I'm guessing he lost a bunch of his instruments.

the records and CDs should be fine with a proper cleaning though lables and covers will be toast. i'm going with the guys that say try to save the gear. My brother found an abandonded QED power amp laying in a field filled with silt and rusted in places. It worked fine after a little cleaning. (If you don't want to try send me the tube stuff and i'll let you know how it turned out.) the biggest problem will be with the salt in the water trashing connections but if you get to the pieces and give them a good cleaning before they have much exposure to air you may be OK. cleaning the pots may be a pain but they are relatively cheap to replace. Transformers may be a problem depending on how they were sealed. I'm guessing cables may be a bigger problem since they are twisted wire rather than solid core which would allow water to migrate into them around the casing. Make sure that everything is bone dry before you put power to it. I'd set the cleaned pieces under heat lamps for a couple of days if it were me. Then i'd just turn things on and wait for the big puff. If it passes that test then you may be OK. If it fails it still may be a relatively cheap fix.

good luck with everything.