by john46 » Fri Oct 12, 2007 5:07 pm
by Record-changer » Sun Oct 14, 2007 7:21 am
by john46 » Sun Oct 14, 2007 8:41 am
by sentjourn » Sat Oct 20, 2007 1:07 am
Record-changer wrote:If you can get it perfectly aligned, and the crack is not spread open or spalled, super glue works great. Line it up by putting it on something flat with a slot in it. One time, I used a table-saw with the saw blade removed. Another time, I used a dining room table that takes additional leaves, with the leaf-insertion gap open about an inch.
Shim the parts of the disc on opposite sides of the crack with newspaper layers if needed, until the edge line up perfectly. Make sure the crack is entirely over the slot. Then put one drop on the rim (outside the grooves) and one drop in the runout area. If the crack is visible at the spindle hole, put another drop there. Don't move the record set for a couple of hours, in case there is too much super glue.
If you line it up perfectly, the crack becomes noiseless. If you miss, the record is permanently out of line.
One caveat. The repair is as strong as the original shellac, but it is brittle. Do not use the repaired record on a record changer.
Also beware of records made during World War II. This method might not work on those. They were made with a cheap filler between two thin layers of shellac. Some have glass cores. Others have asphalt or cardboard in the cores, or a mixture of sawdust and hide glue (an early version of pressboard). And some records were made to be broken, because they contained maps (for prisoners of war to use to escape) stamped in them.
by Record-changer » Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:48 am
by john46 » Thu Nov 08, 2007 7:39 pm
by Andromeda International Records » Mon Jan 07, 2008 2:01 am
by john46 » Mon Jan 07, 2008 5:06 pm
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