eli griggs
Member
Is anyone here using one of these with their camera(s) and what results have you had with pinhole cameras treated with blasts of ionized air from these devices?
Cheers
Cheers
From the crackling I heard last time I used a ZeroStat (on a vinyl record, roughly 1982), I surely wouldn't use one on the film -- at least not before processing. I'd be concerned about those lightning-shaped static tracks you sometimes get on 35mm or 120 if you wind too fast in very dry conditions...
My own preference would be a mini-vacuum after the Zerostat -- for the camera (and I'd avoid it on cameras with lots of electronics; those don't like high voltage).
Properly used, the Zerostat does not touch anything. I doubt it would affect unexposed or undeveloped film.I have a Zerostat; an earlier model. I use it on vinyl records and film; it does help remove dust. I wouldn't say it produces a "blast" of ionized air, rather a stream of ions which neutralize the charge on the surface and the dust which makes the removal of the dust much easier. There are also brushes which use a polonium strip to discharge the charge, the brush then removes the dust, etc. I suppose you could shoot the interior of a camera with the Zerostat, and follow up with some canned air to blow away the dust.
I have been using the Static Master brushes for years. I'm not dead yet. And I don't think most of the others using these brushes have succumbed to radiation poisoning. You would have to ingest the polonium for it to be noxious.I don't think you can buy anything w/ polonium anymore. It's a very radioactive element that was used to kill the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. It only takes a tiny, tiny amount to kill someone.
I don't know that there's no local high voltage in that ion stream -- and integrated circuits that aren't protected can be destroyed by a static discharge you can't feel or hear.
Properly used, the Zerostat does not touch anything. I doubt it would affect unexposed or undeveloped film.
I have been using the Static Master brushes for years. I'm not dead yet. And I don't think most of the others using these brushes have succumbed to radiation poisoning. You would have to ingest the polonium for it to be noxious.
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