
#ILIFT ULTRASONIC REVIEWS PRO#
Many readers will see alcohol as an aggressive medium when used with vinyl and would rather not use it at all. Record Cleaner Pro (the company) did state that the amount of alcohol volume, when mixed with the bath of distilled water, is so small that no damage will occur over the short or long term. This liquid apparently uses alcohol as a surfactant to break surface tension and improve cleaning. The 100ml of concentrate is diluted into distilled water and is apparently good for up to 25 uses. You receive a small bottle when you buy the RCM. To use the machine, you fill the bath with Record Cleaner Pro’s concentrated cleaning liquid called Wet Stuff. Call me paranoid – and I’m probably being needlessly over anxious about this – but that, in itself, rings a tiny alarm bell. In addition, I don’t have an immediate concern but I am also just a little perturbed that the motor assembly’s power socket is relatively near the opening of the bath and all of that liquid. Both can be purchased from the company or you can just buy the vinyl-specific additions. To confirm then, you need two products: the bath created by GT Sonic and the motor assembly from Record Cleaner Pro. Thus, what you are actually buying from Record Cleaner Pro is a motor assembly (see image below), attachments and vinyl holder that adds to and changes the nature of the original GT Sonic product from a general cleaner for, say, jewellery to a vinyl record cleaner. It arrives with a six litre bath, adjustable timer and heat settings and can be bought, on its own, from Amazon for £104.39 (the price stated going to press) HERE.

That’s left to the GT Sonic Digital Ultrasonic Cleaner. More to the point, Record Cleaner Pro is not in control the part of the RCM that does the actual cleaning.

The majority of the construction of this cleaning machine is ‘bought in’ from a third party and has no direct connection to Record Cleaner Pro at all.
