Ultrasonic LLC | Ultrasonic Cleaning Machines | Ultrasonic Parts ...

18 Aug.,2025

 

Ultrasonic LLC | Ultrasonic Cleaning Machines | Ultrasonic Parts ...

I work for a high tech manufacturing facility. We were having a cleaning issue that was massively impacting the quality of our product. Dustin and the crew gave us a free personalized demo cleaning using our actual parts. Worked perfectly. We decided to purchase same day.

Later, one of our techs broke a component being careless. Ultrasonic fixed our machine under warranty over the weekend and we are back in business.

Couldn’t ask for more on customer service and quality product that works great. Keep up the good work!

If you are looking for more details, kindly visit our website.

RedCrown are exported all over the world and different industries with quality first. Our belief is to provide our customers with more and better high value-added products. Let's create a better future together.

For more information, please visit ultrasonic cleaning equipment.

looking to buy an ultrasonic cleaner. Recommendations?

Like the OP I’m also interested in buying one. Where are the price thresholds for performance?

For example you can buy some cheap crap Chinese ratchet for $5 or for $20 get a 100x better Taiwan ratchet. Or spend $100 and it goes up maybe only 2x to 5x in performance compared to the taiwan.

Where do the prices lie for ultrasonic cleaners? If you jump in price from $100l what is the next level of price to get a boost in quality?

I was looking into this a while back until I found a whole used ultrasonic setup on a local audio enthusiast group and I figured I would run it until the cheap Chinese tank died.

"Vevor" seems to be a common brand of what I have, this I'm pretty sure is the exact unit I have, it's a 10L so just about 2.5 gallons, would fit the OP's needs as well

VEVOR Professional Ultrasonic Cleaner, 10L Ultrasonic Jewelry Cleaner with Digital Timer & Heater, Stainless Steel Industrial Sonic Cleaner 40kHz for Glasses, Watches, Rings, Small Parts | VEVOR US

VEVOR Ultrasonic Cleaner 10L with 40kHz frequency and digital timer provides powerful cleaning for jewelry, glasses, and more with advanced transducer technology.
Here's a comparable Elma, but it does have sweep and pulse however you need to purchase the basket separately, or else make your own (the Vevor comes with a basket)

Elma EP100H Ultrasonic Cleaner

The EP100H is an ultrasonic cleaning problem solver. It has the capabilities and size to fit your cleaning requirements.
So, yeah, the 10x jump in price is about accurate. I didn't remember exactly because I looked at the numbers and figured when mine died, I would re-evaluate my finances and decide then if I could even afford a better unit, even though it doesn't make financial sense - mine works fine for my uses; seeing as it's lasted 2 years for me plus however long the previous owner had it, that means the Elma would have to last 20-30 years for me to even break even from buying it over just buying another Vevor or whatever when I need to. The only real argument for the more expensive unit is if it cleans better/faster enough to make it functionally superior to the inexpensive unit, and I have no opinion on that as I have not had a project car in a long time. I don't use this regularly, but when I do use it, it's often running for a whole afternoon on 10 minute cycles; usually, load four LPs in it, run for 10 minutes, then within a minute or two another four LPs will go in for a cycle, etc. (I have only cleaned about half my collection so far, and I have also found that even LPs that have been previously run through a Nitty Gritty can benefit from ultrasonic. Additionally, I finally got a big boy stylus that would cost about $200 to replace, so only records that have been USd get played on my good turntable and even then, before each play I will brush the surface with either a vintage Discwasher or a carbon fiber brush, and dip the stylus in Moongel to get off whatever made it through the whole cleaning regimen. Yes, I know that there are people who have orders of magnitude more expensive gear, but $200 is a lot for me so I'm taking care of what I have.)

I'm not aware of anything in between the ~$150-200 and $- price levels; @Davefr mentioned Elma but my memory when researching this a few years ago says that any comparable Western made unit was also comparable in price and features (or more expensive). I'd be grateful for a heads up if I missed anything.

Edit: if the more expensive cleaners would put off less audible noise in operation, that'd be a big plus too. Can anyone comment?
I was looking into this a while back until I found a whole used ultrasonic setup on a local audio enthusiast group and I figured I would run it until the cheap Chinese tank died.

"Vevor" seems to be a common brand of what I have, this I'm pretty sure is the exact unit I have, it's a 10L so just about 2.5 gallons, would fit the OP's needs as well

VEVOR Professional Ultrasonic Cleaner, 10L Ultrasonic Jewelry Cleaner with Digital Timer & Heater, Stainless Steel Industrial Sonic Cleaner 40kHz for Glasses, Watches, Rings, Small Parts | VEVOR US

VEVOR Ultrasonic Cleaner 10L with 40kHz frequency and digital timer provides powerful cleaning for jewelry, glasses, and more with advanced transducer technology.
Here's a comparable Elma, but it does have sweep and pulse however you need to purchase the basket separately, or else make your own (the Vevor comes with a basket)

Elma EP100H Ultrasonic Cleaner

The EP100H is an ultrasonic cleaning problem solver. It has the capabilities and size to fit your cleaning requirements.
So, yeah, the 10x jump in price is about accurate. I didn't remember exactly because I looked at the numbers and figured when mine died, I would re-evaluate my finances and decide then if I could even afford a better unit, even though it doesn't make financial sense - mine works fine for my uses; seeing as it's lasted 2 years for me plus however long the previous owner had it, that means the Elma would have to last 20-30 years for me to even break even from buying it over just buying another Vevor or whatever when I need to. The only real argument for the more expensive unit is if it cleans better/faster enough to make it functionally superior to the inexpensive unit, and I have no opinion on that as I have not had a project car in a long time. I don't use this regularly, but when I do use it, it's often running for a whole afternoon on 10 minute cycles; usually, load four LPs in it, run for 10 minutes, then within a minute or two another four LPs will go in for a cycle, etc. (I have only cleaned about half my collection so far, and I have also found that even LPs that have been previously run through a Nitty Gritty can benefit from ultrasonic. Additionally, I finally got a big boy stylus that would cost about $200 to replace, so only records that have been USd get played on my good turntable and even then, before each play I will brush the surface with either a vintage Discwasher or a carbon fiber brush, and dip the stylus in Moongel to get off whatever made it through the whole cleaning regimen. Yes, I know that there are people who have orders of magnitude more expensive gear, but $200 is a lot for me so I'm taking care of what I have.)

I'm not aware of anything in between the ~$150-200 and $- price levels; @Davefr mentioned Elma but my memory when researching this a few years ago says that any comparable Western made unit was also comparable in price and features (or more expensive). I'd be grateful for a heads up if I missed anything.

Edit: if the more expensive cleaners would put off less audible noise in operation, that'd be a big plus too. Can anyone comment?
How do the LPs work in the US? Does it take the paper labels off? or is this like a rotisserie set up? Post pictures please, I'm slow on the uptake.