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The only issue here is how to get otherwise reasonable and intelligent people to buy into such a complete pile of crap. I wish I knew.
It is certainly inconvenient vis a vis digital playback of any kind but, like cooking real food or conducting the Japanese tea ceremony, it has a reward and a relevance if you can take the time and enjoy the process.
Vinyl_lady:Sorry
Wayner:The fact that you suggest trying the gun after listening is the only logical point in this discussion. Whether or not this gun can put a static charge on a PVC platter is quite a large stretch, but for the sake of argument, lets say it can. How many cycles around before that charge will be removed by the action of stylus running around in the track. The paper industry has this issue when paper is wound onto a large roll and they ground the roll to remove the charge.Any pops or crackles you hear during playback is the stylus striking a small particle. Clean records sound better. The illusion is maintained. You don't hear static. Very often , if I may also illustrate my experience, clean records that sound that way are staticy when I remove them but I didn't hear any evidence during playback. Clean records sound better. Static has no effect on playback. If you think that the little gun removes a static charge then use it after playback. Even then how long will it last to discourage dust buildup on the record?
I was taught long ago that the proper ay to use a Zerostat is to aim it at the record from a distance of maybe a foot and then pull the trigger very slowly. Once the trigger is pulled all the way in, aim the gun out into the room away from your record and release the trigger. I'm not so sure about efficacy either...