Something I can help/share my experiences with.
I have a Spin Clean somewhere in my garage but cant find it. This is what I have used and still use when I have the time/patience. As of late Ive just been playing the real clean records and only cleaning with a Discwasher brush and vacuuming the dust up. That last bit of dust has been a pain in the butt for me and am working on it.
For cleaning fluid I use the recipe mentioned in this video. I believe it is 90% alcohol, Jet Dry Dishwasher fluid and distilled water. I also followed most of the cleaning process in the 1st video and the 2nd one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNLGo5K5m_Mhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67C3KlBtxYwThis is the brush I used when applying the DIY record cleaning fluid. I got it from Target for a couple of bucks.
I got the lazy susans shown in the 2nd Youtube video at a Big Lots close out store.
I already had a shop vac vacuum but I believe they can be as cheap as $30.
The vacuum attachment I got to clean the records was this one from ebay. $30
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Vinyl-Vac-Record-Cleaner-Vacuum-Wand-Use-Your-Own-Vacuum-On-33s-45s-78s-/310643011047?pt=US_Vinyl_Record_Cleaning&hash=item4853c42de7Some people have made their own wands but I just dont have the patience or time so the $30 was worth it for me.
I got some chamois cloths and micro fiber cloths from either Autozone or a $.99 store.
To clean the stylus I use a Magic Eraser designated just for the stylus.
The stylus brush I have came with the Denon cart I bought.
These methods arent pretty and are more labor intensive than using a VPI cleaner. It is better than nothing though. Id rather go through these processes than messing up the needle on a AT150MLX playing dirty records. That is one sweet cart.
Also thanks for posting those holders that protect the labels. I may have to try those.