Whiteymorange said:
So, now that I know that the thing is not just an evil toy meant to zap your hand when you innocently hold it to your palm and squeeze the handle... how does one use it? Do I zap my negative after blowing it off with gas or do I skip the blow off hoping the dust will simply leap from my neg after a wack with the magical zapper? Do I zap a brush and then brush the neg? I was guess I was mistakenly thinking that it would deliver a charge, not clear one (my physics is a little rusty, I'm afraid.) Should I put the negative in a carrier before zapping?
- Zap the negative holding the "thingee" a short distance away (not touching!) and pressing the button. It probably does not have much a charge.
- Blow off the negative. This will, of course, create a charge (triboelectric effect).
- Zap the negative. Then another blow and another zap. For blowing I use a big rubber bulb from the corner pharmacy.
- You can also use a good brush to dust the negative off. This can be one of the fancy ones from Kinetronics (or other specialized vendors) or a good goat hairs brush from an artist's supply.
The combination of air, brush, zapping etc. is really a mix of mood and contamination (dust) problem. Blowing off a dusty negative tends, however, not to be a good idea. Here start with the brush! Whichever way you do it, the other way is just as logical. That's why the industry has delivered anti-static air guns; non-contacting (brushless) film cleaners (use a bunch of tiny air jets); brush and vacuum (typically a fan); brush, anti-static; and brush, antistatic and vacuum models. (much like the mountain of shoes in Doug Adams's "Hitchhiker's Guide" which can drive some to digital, aka "shoe event horizon", only to then have dust problems on their sensors).
Another tip: Get a small piece of Dycem sticky rubber and use under the negative. Much of the dust falling from the negative will land on it and stick. (and yes there are even film cleaners made using this property).