|  | Posted by Allen on 12/11/06 22:19 
Robin Banks wrote:
 > On Mon, 11 Dec 2006 05:19:48 GMT, "videophile" <rayluca@shaw.ca> wrote:
 >
 >
 >>My question of compressed air or vacumn were just that because they used to
 >>use these when cleaning vcrs.
 >
 >
 > With a VCR, there's really nothing much to knock off.  The head stack is
 > metal, the heads are screwed or glued into it.  With those, it's usually tape
 > shedding that's creating the "dirt", so you would use a cleaning swabs instead
 > of air to carefully remove it from the head stack.
 >
 > With a CD or DVD player/recorder, it's surprisingly easy to dislodge the lens
 > from the laser assembly.  Once that happens, you have a paperweight.
 > Compressed air will usually do it easily.  I've done it a few times on dead
 > units to show friends why NOT to use compressed air.
 >
 > Come to think of it, on those dead units, the lenses usually looked pretty
 > clean anyway.
 >
 > --
 > ~~R.Banks
 
 The first CD player that I had required _weekly_ (at least) cleaning, as
 indicated by failure to track, which I did with foam swabs. It was so
 bad that I finally just left the cover loose and didn't bother with
 screws. I got rid of it quite soon and replaced it with another player
 (different manufacturer) with I cleaned two or three times a year,
 dictated by tracking problems. No player or drive, CD or DVD, that I've
 owned since then, standalone or installed in a PC, has ever required
 cleaning. The environment has remained fairly constant in that span of
 20 years or so, so I must assume that drives have improved.
 
 Allen
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