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CD lens cleaners
Do they work or are they a con?
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CD lens cleaners
"informer" wrote in message ... Do they work or are they a con? They are of NO USE whatsoever. The lens has a little ' wall ' around the edge of it, which just serves to deflect the brush bristles so that they only touch the very centre of the lens. I have also had these lens cleaner discs actually cause damage to the laser, as a result of the brush bristles getting caught in the cover which surrounds the lens, and pulling it off. Cleaning the lens properly using isopropyl alcohol and a cotton bud is not, in most cases, hard to do, but if you don't feel confident to do it, take it to a professional. Arfa |
CD lens cleaners
I've used an impregnated camera lens cleaning cloth very carefully on main
CD (the lens comes out with the tray) but dreading cleaning the kitchen one as it can't be seen from the outside. -- John the West Ham fan "Arfa Daily" wrote in message ... "informer" wrote in message ... Do they work or are they a con? They are of NO USE whatsoever. The lens has a little ' wall ' around the edge of it, which just serves to deflect the brush bristles so that they only touch the very centre of the lens. I have also had these lens cleaner discs actually cause damage to the laser, as a result of the brush bristles getting caught in the cover which surrounds the lens, and pulling it off. Cleaning the lens properly using isopropyl alcohol and a cotton bud is not, in most cases, hard to do, but if you don't feel confident to do it, take it to a professional. Arfa |
CD lens cleaners
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 14:31:15 +0000 (UTC), informer wrote:
Do they work or are they a con? Con. Dust is basically very tiny rocks and scraping them off of a fragile lens at high speed is a sure fire way of scratching the lens. People always say "use a CD cleaner" because it is a brainless fix and is similar to using a VCR head cleaning tape. However, a dirty lens is responsible for probably less than 2% of CD player failures, mostly people living in the midst of a duststorm. Far more likely is a mechanical problem, servo adjustment, or laser output. If you must have the lens cleaned, spend the 10 minutes to pull the player out of your setup, pull the cover, and use a q-tip and denatured rubbing alcohol. |
CD lens cleaners
"AZ Nomad" wrote in message ... On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 14:31:15 +0000 (UTC), informer wrote: Do they work or are they a con? Con. Dust is basically very tiny rocks and scraping them off of a fragile lens at high speed is a sure fire way of scratching the lens. People always say "use a CD cleaner" because it is a brainless fix and is similar to using a VCR head cleaning tape. However, a dirty lens is responsible for probably less than 2% of CD player failures, mostly people living in the midst of a duststorm. Far more likely is a mechanical problem, servo adjustment, or laser output. If you must have the lens cleaned, spend the 10 minutes to pull the player out of your setup, pull the cover, and use a q-tip and denatured rubbing alcohol. Having been a professional repairer of CD players ever since they first came on the scene, and having seen just about every make and model from cornflake packet freebies to TTP priced 'professional' units, I cannot agree that only 2% of CD faults are caused by dirty lenses. In my humble opinion, at least 40% of CD problems are dirty lens related, a further 40% are caused by a defective optical block, 10 % are mechanical, and a small 10% are support circuitry related. In contrast, DVD problems are most NEVER caused by a dirty lens. With those, 10% are probably mechanical problems, 50% are faulty optical blocks, and 40% are electronic problems. Arfa |
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