Chocolate Record Schallplatten aus Schokolade

Once you have cut a master laquer, you have metal stampers created and have records pressed from them. Discuss manufacturing here. (Record Matrix Electroforming- Plating, Vinyl Record Pressing.)

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motorino
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Chocolate Record Schallplatten aus Schokolade

Post: # 2565Unread post motorino
Thu Apr 03, 2008 11:46 am

Chocolate Record Schallplatten aus Schokolade :shock:

http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=LavSdy8mf_s

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Jccc
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Post: # 2566Unread post Jccc
Thu Apr 03, 2008 12:19 pm

that is soo cool!!!

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Lex
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Post: # 2580Unread post Lex
Sat Apr 05, 2008 11:02 am

I'm getting hungry :)

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Jccc
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Post: # 2583Unread post Jccc
Sat Apr 05, 2008 4:17 pm

i wonder if you can skratch with those records and if so will it melt on your finger tips and needle??
either way thats fresh!!1

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vitanola
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Post: # 3448Unread post vitanola
Wed Sep 10, 2008 4:41 pm

Stollwerke manufactured chocolate records and little tin phonographs to play them in the first decade of the last century. They apparently sold very well.

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alienmanstk
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Post: # 3464Unread post alienmanstk
Sun Sep 14, 2008 11:48 am

this is great!!! simply record your record on whatever machine you have, then, use that cool way of making a mold of your record http://gadgets.qj.net/How-to-Pirate-a-Vinyl-Record/pg/49/aid/39381

melt some chocolate, and pour!!! thats gonna be fun to try! Or, why not record onto chocolate blanks?!

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VRCM
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Post: # 4184Unread post VRCM
Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:12 pm

I did it the exact same way! Except I tried to cut a blank chocolate disc because I do not have a mother to mold it from. My record would't track--I think the guy in the video used a harder chocolate. It is very easy to use the same method to make a chocolate mother but you can't really go any where from there (it looks cool though).
Tim

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buckettovsissors
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Post: # 4199Unread post buckettovsissors
Sun Jan 25, 2009 5:26 am

I still have not tried this but its high on my list.
I think this would be easy once you got the mix right, it seems that he is doing a good job of keeping the records really flat.
Maybe adding some of that wax for cooking stuff with choco?
I also really like the tin grammaphone idea that comes with the record.

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oliver8bit
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Post: # 4315Unread post oliver8bit
Mon Feb 02, 2009 1:33 am

man, wish there was a translation! i think i heard "coca cola" in there somewhere, maybe its chocolate mixed with other things..

i want to know what material that mother is cut in..!

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VRCM
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Post: # 4323Unread post VRCM
Mon Feb 02, 2009 10:11 am

I wonder if you could make a mother from a regular record with that silicon stuff that dentists use to make molds of things. It would be good enough to pick up the grooves but also flexible to remove the chocolate record easily.
Tim

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oliver8bit
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Post: # 4326Unread post oliver8bit
Mon Feb 02, 2009 4:57 pm

Haven't tried the dental plaster yet but the properties look pretty good and its quite inexpensive. A 12" disc of the stuff would take about 15 minutes to dry and cost under 40 cents.

Yeah, i was all on this board a year ago trying out the "How to Pirate a Vinyl" with silicone materials, etc. and it never worked for me. One of my friends just recently decided to try it out and it worked perfectly, i mean, i was astonished. I now realize it didn't work for me cos I was making a mother from a plastic plate a friend of mine lathe cut. I think when I cast the mold of a plastic plate it is too flimsy to withstand the curing process and ends up curving and bending, which is something the more durable commercial vinyl records don't do. The only other thing I could think of is the difference in depth of the cuts but I'm not entirely sure about that.

Its seriously the only thing holding me back from starting a record company from my bedroom.

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oliver8bit
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Post: # 4590Unread post oliver8bit
Tue Mar 17, 2009 12:22 pm

Okay, so a friend of mine has been doing this to his 7" and it works perfect. Some surface noise but the material he is using now is cut with filler so im thinking that may be the reason.

Turns out when you try to play a duped record at 45 rpm it will probably skip whereas the 33 1/3 one work without a doubt. Using the silicone mold you could make hundreds of copies without deterioration in sound. some pics

Image
Image
Image
Image

He got dye and mixed it up partially with the urethane, resulting in a psychedelic tie dye look!

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VRCM
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Post: # 4592Unread post VRCM
Tue Mar 17, 2009 1:42 pm

WOW. So you made a silicon mold of a 45 and then just poured urethane on? See I need to get some silicon. I tried it with wax and the urethane fused with the wax. I used one of those flexi-disc Time Life magazine records. They are slightly smaller than a 45 but they are 33 1/3. Did you cut the record that you made the mold from or was it pressed?
Tim

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cuttercollector
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Post: # 4595Unread post cuttercollector
Tue Mar 17, 2009 2:27 pm

Is this a 2 step process?
How do you go from the "negative" mold you get off the original record back to a "positive" record with grooves instead of ridges? Do the process twice?

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oliver8bit
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Post: # 4596Unread post oliver8bit
Tue Mar 17, 2009 3:05 pm

Here's his negative:
Image

He made it from a real 7" record, said he had to file down the edges a little to make them less sharp and more cylindrical. The silicone rubber stuff was diff from the Smooth-On but basically the same material. Its kind of pricey - roughly a dollar an ounce - but totally worth it. Heat resistant and you can cast anything but more silicone into it and it will come right out. Without even needing a release!

The flexi idea is a good one, but I tried a similar thing last year of doing this process with plastic plates and it failed. The plate was too thin to withstand bending as the silicone cured so i ended up with bumpy and curvy records. Gluing them completely flat might fix this tho!


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Jccc
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Post: # 4607Unread post Jccc
Fri Mar 20, 2009 7:35 pm

Wow!!! This is soo cool!! I just ordered some stuff and gonna experiment with it.
I will post results.

Just a question..Do you think if its safe to use this stuff on a acetate dubplate?

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VRCM
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Post: # 4621Unread post VRCM
Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:14 pm

How about silicon bath tub caulking? I am going to try it. It will most likely be cheaper.
Tim

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oliver8bit
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Post: # 4637Unread post oliver8bit
Wed Mar 25, 2009 1:15 pm

Yeah, that article is the same technique. Dont know about silicone bathtub chalking, i think u need a lot of silicone for it to work. At least to hold the shape. Do post if it works tho!!

I could never figure out what is it that makes some material have more surface noise than other material. That's the main problem im dealing with.

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VRCM
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Post: # 4639Unread post VRCM
Wed Mar 25, 2009 2:40 pm

Ok wow. I was so inspired to do this yesterday that I ran out into my tool shed and found an old tube of caulk (white) that had hardened near the tip. I cut it open and spooned out a bunch onto a 45 (donna summer?). I spread it around (keeping it thin to make sure that it would dry; maybe about a 1/4 of an inch or so) with a wooden dowel. I let it cure until this morning. It peeled off really easily. Although there were a lot of bubbles because I smeared it around so much. When I do it the second time I will put a glob in the middle and vibrate the table somehow to make the silicon level out over the record by itself without having to spread it around. This should minimize bubbles. Also due to my "spreading of the silicon" the other surface of the silicon "Father or Stamper (if you wil)" was very bumpy. As a result it did not lay flat after I peeled it off. Despite the bubbles and the fact that it did not lay flat I went ahead and spray painted it just to get a sample of what the groove would look like. After three coats of spray paint I decided that I had built up enough to peel off the spray paint (I used regular black gloss). It too peeled off very easily although there were holes where the bubbles were. I still tried putting it on the record player and what do you know. It skipped the entire time due to the bubble holes but what I did hear sounded fantastic.

FYI it did leave some sort of very thin film on the original record. When I played the original record after I had made the silicon father the needle pulled up the film. I would suggest NOT using you favorite records to do this. You will probably need to clean out the grooves with a tooth brush or something afterwards.

I will post when I make another one using a better technique.
I will also try to get some pictures up.
Tim

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