Drying time after a VPI record cleaner?


Hello everyone, I am curious what you all are doing in terms of drying time for your records after you clean them on a VPI vacuum record cleaning machine.  

I am using the VPI model 16.5.  My routine lately is to put the record on the cleaning plater, blast with an air compressor to remove the easy dust, apply 1 step cleaning formula with brush for 1 minute, vacuum for 3 revolutions, flip repeat.  After that, I set the record vertically in a small kitchen dish drying rack made of plastic coated metal.  I can fit 13 records in the rack, all vertical, none touching, and only coming in contact with the rack on the extreme edge of the vinyl, so no contact to the actual grooves.  I then leave them to fully dry out for several hours or overnight.  The thought is, I do not want any liquid that didn't get vacuumed up to remain. (though they look more or less dry to me, I figure it is possible to have some moisture still in there somewhere)

My question is, is this last step necessary?  Do you just put the record back into the sleeve after vacuuming?  Or, if you do use a dish rack like I do, how long to you let them dry?
marktomaras
I find that mine are damp when done, so I have been buying and using the drying cloths that Record Spin uses and sells. That completes the drying and if any moisture is present, I don't see it but I assume the time it takes to get the record que'd it is completely dry.
After a full rotation I lift the tube for a second to clear both the tube and the brush.  Then I vacuum one more revolution and the record is dry.   
Wlutke, that is clever, I'm going to give it a try!  So, you leave the vacuum running, and just manually lift the tube off the record?  How long do you feel is the proper length of time to have the tube lifted for this procedure?
if you add another portion of alcohol into solution, it should come out of VPI dry.

You may be using too much fluid on the subsequent records you're cleaning. The brush soaks up the liquid as you go, so squirt less on the record surface.