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33 - Vinyl Record Cleaning Kit- Record Vacuum Wand for Deep Cleaning (Attaches to Your Wet Dry Vacuum Hose, U.S. Standard 1.25' & 1.5')

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$29.97

$ 13 .99 $13.99

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Product Description

"I understand that many vinyl record collectors think they have to spend a fortune in order to experience clean records. At Vinyl Vac we are committed to providing effective and affordable record cleaning products, so you don't have to break the bank in order to enjoy truly clean records. If you want the best possible sound quality from your vinyl records make the Vinyl Vac 33 part of your record cleaning system. "

- Ron Miller

Vinyl Vac Founder

Extraction Is The Answer

Get The Most From Your Vinyl Vac 33 System

  • We highly recommend you watch the instructional video under "Related video shorts" found below on this page.
  • For the best results, we suggest you follow our complete instructions on building your Vinyl Vac 33 Record Vacuum System.
  • Dedicate a lazy susan or an old unplugged turntable setup for your cleaning surface.
  • Only use of a wet/dry vac (with a 1.25" or 1.5" hose) with your Vinyl Vac 33. Only use a wet/dry vac when dealing with liquids.
  • Include a rinse step in your cleaning process. Just as you wouldn't just shampoo your hair and never rinse it, a rinse step is essential to truly clean records.
  • Follow the rinse step with vacuuming with the Vinyl Vac 33. This will extract the embedded dirt and grime in the grooves.
  • Static can be present no matter how clean a record is. Always use a good quality anti-static brush before each play.
The End Result

The End Result

Give Your Needle A Break!

Your record needle is tired of trying to find it's way through the dirt and grime blocking it's path.

There is nothing like the rich analog sound of a vinyl record but a dirty record can rob you of that rich analog sound. The Vinyl Vac 33 will help to restore your records back to the peak sound experience they were meant to give you. Prolong the life of your needle by clearing it's path through your record grooves.

Still on the fence?

Read our reviews and see what others are saying about the Vinyl Vac 33.

Vinyl Vac 33 Closer Look

Before & After

  • If you simply spray your records with a cleaning solution and wipe with them with a cloth. You are leaving dirt and grime behind that is embedded in the grooves.
  • If you run your records through a cleaning solution and simply air dry them on a rack. You are leaving dirt and grime behind that is embedded in the grooves.
  • The only way to truly lift that nasty embedded dirt and grime is to extract it with the Vinyl Vac 33 system.

In the past, you had to spend hundreds, if not thousands, on a record vacuum system. The Vinyl Vac 33 will give you the same results of those expensive record vacuum systems but at a mere fraction of the cost.

Now you can effectively lift that embedded dirt and grime that has robbed you of the musical bliss only your vinyl records can provide.

Your turntable stylus, while tracing the vinyl groove, will encounter dirt, dust and grime that has attached or embedded itself to the vinyl.

This results in the pops and clicks that takes away the premium sound of the vinyl experience.

Cleaning your vinyl records with a record cleaning solution will aid in minimizing the unwanted pops and clicks. However, it won't truly extract the root cause or these pops and clicks from the grooves.

The Vinyl Vac 33 attaches to your wet/dry vacuum hose (1.25" or 1.5") and when used as directed, will lift the dirt and grime out of those precious vinyl grooves. Simply clean your record with your favorite cleaning solution, rinse and then use the Vinyl Vac to ensure that you are lifting NOT leaving the dirt and grime behind in the grooves.

If you are looking a powerful record cleaning solution consider our Vinyl Vac Concentrate Cleaners (1oz & 2oz available). A great addition to your Vinyl Vac system. Consider our Vinyl Vac 33 Combo which comes with a 1oz bottle of the Vinyl Vac Concentrate Cleaner (which makes a half gallon of powerful record cleaning solution).

Other Products From Vinyl Vac

Vinyl Vac 33

Vinyl Vac 33

Vinyl Vac 33 1oz Combo

Vinyl Vac 33 Combo 1oz

Vinyl Vac 33 Combo 2oz

Vinyl Vac 33 Combo 2oz

Record Roller

Record Roller


Lawrence Page
2025-07-21 18:22:03
I have an immense record collection from high school and college, which has grown over the years by inheriting collections from others, as well as thrift store/used record store finds and some new 180-gram purchases. When I bit the bullet and bought a restored Thorens turntable, I didn’t want to wear down the fine-tuned motor, band, and spindle on record cleaning. (It is designed for minimal vibration and audiophile sound, not cleaning pressure). So I extensively researched and tried many different record cleaning options. In addition to the old Discwasher-style cleaning brush, I tried the Nitty Gritty, Oki Noki, wood glue (surprisingly effective, but impractical), dishwashing soap, Windex (don’t try it-ammonia slightly dissolves and gums up records), as well as an elaborate ultrasonic cleaning setup with the Cleaner Vinyl attachments (works well, but overkill and impractical for daily cleaning). I have settled on this doohickey as the core of the best system.I use this attachment with a dedicated $40 “Stinger” wet-dry vacuum. I also repurposed an old low-end Gemini turntable and converted it into a dedicated record-cleaning station. (The old direct drive turntable motor works, but the electronics and stabilzation of the turntable were not great, so it was a perfect repurpose). I also make my own fluid out of alcohol, distilled water, and a drop of liquid dishwashing soap (merely to break surface tension; otherwise, the water/alcohol mix would just bead on the record and wouldn’t get into the grooves). I wet-clean with an old LAST or Discwasher velvet brush, then use this vacuum attachment merely to suck it all up after being soaked and wet cleaned: the older the record, the more I wet-clean before using the vacuum. Together, the items cost less than one-third the price of a Nitty Gritty/OkiNoki.This setup works perfectly: even better than the pricier vacuum record cleaner units. It is not as automatic as the Nitty Gritty or OkiNoki, but the suction is better/stronger even with an inexpensive $40 vacuum, so it pulls up microscopic dirt best. I can also control how much suction it uses by lifting up on the attachment: heavier pressure initially, then lighter pressure to get any microscopic remnants before I slowly lift it off: thus no “dirt line” at the point where I lifted off. I can also turn the turntable motor off and rotate both the wet-cleaning brush and the vacuum attachment backwards and forwards to suck up dirt that might remain trapped if it were only cleaned in one direction. The whole process takes only a couple of minutes per album, and it makes them look brand new.The materials are simple. But it works. The PVC pipe, glue and velvet they use are good quality. I have cleaned over a hundred records with this system in the past two years, and there is no visible wear on the velvet brush. Some old records are scratched and can’t be improved by cleaning, but it has revived many thrift store purchases to near-perfect near-mint sound quality.
Wyomatt
2025-06-30 15:13:22
This is an excellent and downright amazing product. Once i saw it i knew i could make my own for less, but i ordered it anyhow to support the inventor and save time. All my various other methods of cleaning records over the years were incomplete without actually sucking the grunge out of the grooves, but i didnt want to spend hundreds, even thousands on a professional machine to clean my collection of mostly $1-10 valued albums.I spent many hours researching and trying many cleaning methods before buying this vacuum attachment. I ended up implementing this plus the VinylStyl Deep Groove which is comparable to the Spin Clean, but i feel better designed and carried out. You can also scrub your records with a soft brush and plain soap in the sink (the center labels are very water-resistant) but without sucking out that dirty water or fluid from whatever washing you give the record, theres still going to be stuff in the grooves. High water pressure might get most of it out but vacuuming seems superior to me becasue water pressure may just lodge things in there further. Since a record groove is approximately 1/10th the size of a human hair, i dont believe there is a brush around that would reach in, so vacuuming is your best bet. The difference can be HEARD as well as seen. I have records that came from houses of chain smokers, stored in dusty New Mexico garages, etc and i feel the Vinyl Vac will best take care of them all. I think i even prefer it to the $4000 ultrasonic automatic machine becasue im sort of a gearhead and i actually enjoy the manual operation of my setup, and cleaning and listening to records is theraputic :). Plus with running the vacuum every minute or so i have a reason to turn it up LOUD!The attachment comes with felt strips that are glued to both sides of the suction opening which prevent the hard plastic from riding on the record surface as you move/spin/turn it. Its designed for use right on your turntable but i actually got a spare broken turntable at goodwill to use strictly as a cleaning deck so everything can be done right on the kitchen island. I hold this cleaner steady, with the drilled "pivot" hole resting over the turntable spindle, and i lower the tube part parallel and it sucks itself right onto the record surface, then i spin the record on its platter slowly both directions. There are spare felt pads in the kit. Ive cleaned about 75 records and the felt still looks brand new. It also comes with vacuum reducers to insert inline after the hose, but i think its perfect without them using my 2.0hp small shop vac. It also comes with felt washers to protect the label as you spin the record, but this is the weakest part of the engineering. Within 1 second the felt washer was sucked straight through the spindle hole and i had to get it out of the vacuum. This is partly because the hole is almost 2x bigger than a standard record spindle for some reason. So i had to set a metal washer over to weigh down the felt washer. Luckily i had one lying around that was thin enough not to mess up the angle of the tube--it probably causes about a 3-degree angle. The shop vac power helps it still securely "vacuum" itself to the record even though the metal washer lifting the spindle area keeps the rest of the tube those few degrees from parallel. It actually lifts the vinyl of a 33. For 78s you may have to come up with something thinner. Not a big deal, but im not sure how the felt washer held up during product testing. Its a minor issue and im keeping my eyes open for something else lying around thats thinner than the washer. Since this thing is almost all funtion over looks, I'm thinking about just modifying a cottage cheese container lid or something....it needs to be about that thin. Depite that issue this is still one of the coolest inventions ive ever gotten my hands on and for $110 total i believe i have the best record cleaning system possible.
Mr. Alex Stassi
2025-06-25 13:54:53
There is only one review on here from the UK so I thought i'd make it two!!I received the Vinyl Vac yesterday and wasted no time in trying this bad boy out.I used an old turntable and bought a Qualtex wet/dry vac for £40.Unfortunately the hose size doesn't fit the vinyl vac with or without the large attachment so what I did was cut 2.5 inches off the top of one of the extension tubes and used one of the O-rings to create a snug fit.I got a real dirty 12" single which I bought years from the bargain bin of a second hand record shop and coated it with a vinyl cleaner, left on for a few minutes and proceeded to switch on the vac and as stated by another reviewer, it literally sucked up the record. I guess that's what the suction reducer is for then.After inserting the reducer I proceeded once again to clean the record.The results were amazing.This went from a bad sounding record which had crackles louder than the song to a much much more bearable play, to the point where about 2 minutes into the song the crackles were barely audible.Granted most peoples record collection shouldn't be like this bar the odd bargain big/charity shop purchase.So if you're in the UK do not hesitate to buy the Vinyl Vac. With a bit of trial and error and a few tweaks and adjustments this is a complete affordable record cleaning vacuum system. The best "£75 all in" I've probably ever spent.
D
2025-03-19 17:13:01
Bought this to clean my old records and get rid of the surface noise. Worked great, using an old turntable as a platform. Combine this cleaner with great record sleeves and there's no need for an automatic record cleaner. Works great with my small shop vac.
Eric Blondeau
2025-03-06 15:43:46
Very good quality and Made in USA !!! Easy to use ,highly recommended
Antonio Vidal tasquer
2025-01-11 18:16:11
la boquilla es pequeña, no entra la del aspirador Einhell Aspirador inalámbrico TE-VC 18/10 Li, intentare lijar la, cuando la pruebe volveré a escribir como va, es cara en USA vale la mitad
Red13hot
2024-12-28 16:53:49
Does the job in keeping my record collection in tip-top condition without paying hundreds of dollars for record cleaning machines. There is no other product that can do what this does in this price range. Highly recommended.
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