Subject: Ultrasonic and pneumatic nebulizers for mist consolidation
From time to time I am asked to advise colleagues on the purchase of equipment for use in mist consolidation projects. I personally own two small nebulizer set-ups--one generates the mist pneumatically and one by ultrasonic means. The former is a portable medical compressor that I use with disposable pneumatic nebulizers. It works well for large scale projects where the stronger air flow is not a problem. The latter is a newer (very small) table-top ultrasonic that I purchased quite inexpensively and that I like for more delicate surfaces. In teaching I have demonstrated these as well as retro-fitted ultrasonic humidifiers, the pricier DeVilbiss Ultra-Neb, and disposable pneumatics hooked up to aquarium pumps. I have never had the pleasure of trying the Becker Preservotec Aerosol Generator. I believe it is the most expensive option, but also the only one designed specifically for conservation. I would be interested in a dialogue surrounding the equipment conservators have chosen and how it has impacted their experiences in treatment. There are more and more devices on the medical market now--are the more expensive ones really worth it? Please respond to the list. **** Moderator's comments: Thank you Julie for this reminder. I want to stress that it is intended that your responses normally *should* indeed be sent to the DistList rather than replying privately to the author. Naturally there may be cases where this is inappropriate (and sometimes I explicitly instruct you to reply to the author) but in general this is meant to be a *public* discussion. If you look in the DistList archives in CoOL <URL:http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/cdl> you'll find that there are usually lot's of questions and very few answers, not at all a good situation. Julie Ream Paper Conservator in Private Practice 402 Lenape Trail Wenonah, NJ 08090 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:3 Distributed: Thursday, May 10, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-3-001 ***Received on Friday, 4 May, 2007