There's a lot of information here.

I also caution against using any product that coats or "lubricates" the record surface. The only requirement for cleaning is to gently remove dust and other contaminants without damaging the vinyl surface or leaving any residue.

For records that have been kept clean and only require airborne dust removal, the best cleaner I've ever found is the Pixall roller.

Unfortunately the same company also makes one of the worst products I've found to use on records, Permostat. It's a treatment to eliminate static buildup, and that works fine, but some considerable time after appying it, you start getting endless white powdery buildup around the stylus, and you just have to wash it off the records in order to use them sensibly.

Research a good many years ago showed that lubricants and "wet play" systems are not good for vinyl. The reason that well maintained vinyl records play with low noise and extremely little wear is that the vinyl melts slightly at the point of contact with the stylus, in the same way that ice melts at the point of contact with a skate blade, giving the same gliding effect. Lubricants and wet systems interfere with this neat process.