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SoundStage! Update | ||
Keeping it Clean December 21, 2006
Now I use just one product to clean connections: Caig Caikleen IPA, which is billed as "ultra-pure isopropyl alcohol." Caikleen IPA wasn't dirt cheap like the isopropyl alcohol you can buy at the drug store, but I purchased a 944ml bottle eight years ago for around $20 as I recall, and I've used about a quarter of it. As with cleaning solutions, the cleaning implements I've used over the years have changed for the better too. I ball up a Kleenex that I dab with Caikleen IPA to clean RCA connectors on audio gear. For XLRs and interconnects, I use cotton pipe cleaners -- ones with no dye. I wet one end with Caikleen IPA, which I use to wipe all contact surfaces, and I keep the other end dry for extra scrubbing and removing excess. When I reconnect everything, the clean interconnects slide onto the clean connectors with a slight friction -- a sign that all surfaces are pristine. Clarity, transparency, retrieval of fine detail -- everything is are improved. Whenever I swap cables or electronics, which happens with great frequency, I clean everything to maintain a consistent sonic baseline. The connections on brand-new products are often the dirtiest. You can spend a lot more time cleaning your audio gear than I do, and a lot more money too, but I'm not sure you'll get better results. Unfortunately, Caig no longer makes Caikleen IPA, but they do have a replacement that's similar, Caikleen NF. If you give it a try, let me know what you hear....Marc Mickelson, editor@soundstage.com |
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