What do people place on their platter for dust protection


Just wanted to hit everyone up for some responses. I'm tired of worrying about taking my pristine VM cleaned vinyl on a platter thats been idle for a week. I have a TT in which a dustcover woukd be inpractable. I hadnt googled for it yet. I just wanted to ask here. Plus I'm recovering from surgery and have some extra time.
blueranger

Showing 11 responses by geoffkait

File under I Did Not Know That : 47% of the Earth’s crust is oxygen (O2). Perhaps that accounts for why so many people have been dying recently, eh, glupson? Fortunately mice seem to be immune.
Ozone is the short-lived gas molecule O3, whereas oxygen is O2. O3 is an allotrope of oxygen and is produced by ionization of air, not emitted by ion generators. Air obviously is also composed of Nitrogen gas and other gases.
glupson, do you think oxygen is carcinogenic? Wouldn’t that be a kick in the yarbles?
Rats and People have not (rpt not) been dropping dead because of ozone exposure or using negative ion air purifiers or using negative ion space gun blasters like the ones I sell. People like you and Harry are easily alarmed.
 😦 
Uh, oh, it looks like our friendly non-audiophile tweak hater has another thing for his pseudo skeptic’s toolbox.

Laugh it a bit, give it a try
If I’m not impressed
You can still cry 😢

Please cut me some slack. I’m afraid the real answer is probably over Alan’s head. It’s not really a physics explanation, if you get my drift. Feel free to pm me.

“If I could explain it to the average person they wouldn’t have given me the Nobel prize.” - Richard Feynman 
That was probably an ozone scare. Hope it’s not (rpt not) O2 that’s the problem. 😛 Here’s an update from NIH,

oxicol Sci. 1999 Dec;52(2):162-7.
Ozone carcinogenesis revisited.

Witschi H1, Espiritu I, Pinkerton KE, Murphy K, Maronpot RR.
Author information
Abstract
The question was asked whether ozone would act as a lung carcinogen in mice. To test the hypothesis, female strain A/J mice were exposed for 6 h/day, 5 days/week to 0.12 ppm, 0.5 ppm, or 1.0 ppm of ozone; control animals were kept in filtered air. No ozone-related deaths were observed at any time during the experiment. After 5 months, one-third of the animals were killed. The remaining animals were split into two groups: exposure to ozone continued for one group, whereas the other group was transferred into filtered air. Four months later, these animals were killed. No significant increase in lung tumor multiplicity (average number of tumors per lung) or lung tumor incidence (percentage of tumor-bearing animals) was found in the animals exposed to ozone when compared to animals kept in filtered air, regardless of ozone concentration. Morphometric analysis of lungs of animals exposed to the highest ozone concentration (1.0 ppm) showed a small, statistically not significant increase in centriacinar lesions. It was concluded that ozone is not a lung carcinogen in strain A/J mice at those exposure levels. Moreover, this mouse strain appears to be particularly resistant towards chronic ozone toxicity.

dweller
Harry Pearson (Founder - The Abso!ute Sound) also mentioned the hazards of negative ions...

>>>>Really? Got a link? Quote? Anything?
Just to cut to the chase a little bit radio frequency noise is not (rpt not) negative ions. It’s not any kind of ions. It’s photons, like anything else in the electromagnetic spectrum. All radio frequencies, colors, x rays, Gamma rays, things of that nature, are photons.
Wouldn’t ion type purifiers be good for the sound? That’s why deionizers and anti static devices work on CDs, LPs, cables and such - they bombard the things with a stream of negative ions.

Pop quiz - why is Positive charge bad for the sound? 
Whatever happened to air purifiers? However many it takes. There’s no reason to have dust in the room to begin with.