CS>How the virus is spread

2020-03-24 Thread Deborah Gerard
I have a question for you great minds. I am not well educated on viruses and 
how they spread. I am wondering because in NY they are in lock down and the 
virus is still spreading. Is it possible that people who have the virus when 
they use the toilet the virus is being passed thru the water supply because it 
is recycled? We know our water systems sure don't filter out enough bad 
stuff...Wondering what you all thought about that?j
Thanks in advance,
Not afraid of the virus when it is my time its my time.

Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread MaryAnn Helland
 Thank you Reid. (your first name, right?)MA
On Tuesday, March 24, 2020, 10:12:01 AM CDT, Reid Harvey 
 wrote:  
 
 Mary Ann,  It's the MY-520a, searchable as such.  In case someone else here 
can suggest others please do so.
On Tue, Mar 24, 2020, 8:43 AM MaryAnn Helland  wrote:

 I missed something, somewhere along the line -- what nebulizer is being 
discussed here?  Thanks.MA
On Tuesday, March 24, 2020, 07:11:35 AM CDT, Ode Coyote 
 wrote:  
 
 What Dan said...right onOde

On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 1:31 AM Dan Nave  wrote:

Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...
Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat above 
the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."The ultrasonic 
vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work, so you have to fill 
distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where the clear plastic 
starts.  Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert 
that into the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it 
sealed properly.  The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be 
nebulized away from the vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it 
up.  Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using. This 
vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to "jump" into the 
air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.  Be careful installing the 
top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat fussy...
Hope that helps.
Dan
On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 9:43 PM Neville Munn  wrote:

These little Nebulisers.
They say put water in the bottom bowl, insert medicine cup with your preferred 
medication, then turn it on.  I guess it heats the water up, but, is any of 
that water going to mix with my EIS?  Or does it just heat something up 
independently to the medication?  The old Nebuliser I have had for years 
doesn't take any water, so how do these little things work?
Yeah, I know, I'm a dumb_rse, so humour me.  The little 'manual' talks about 
heat, which I guess is the water being heated?  I don't want to dilute my EIS.  
My old one, you just put the medication in a little cup, turn it on and it's 
good to go.
N.

  
  

Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread Reid Harvey
Mary Ann,  It's the MY-520a, searchable as such.  In case someone else here
can suggest others please do so.

On Tue, Mar 24, 2020, 8:43 AM MaryAnn Helland 
wrote:

> I missed something, somewhere along the line -- what nebulizer is being
> discussed here?  Thanks.
> MA
>
> On Tuesday, March 24, 2020, 07:11:35 AM CDT, Ode Coyote <
> silverpuppy1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> What Dan said...right on
> Ode
>
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 1:31 AM Dan Nave  wrote:
>
> Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...
>
> Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
> Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat
> above the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."
> The ultrasonic vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work,
> so you have to fill distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where
> the clear plastic starts.
> Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert that
> into the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it
> sealed properly.
> The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be nebulized away
> from the vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it up.
> Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using.
> This vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to
> "jump" into the air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.
> Be careful installing the top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat
> fussy...
>
> Hope that helps.
>
> Dan
>
> On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 9:43 PM Neville Munn 
> wrote:
>
> These little Nebulisers.
>
> They say put water in the bottom bowl, insert medicine cup with your
> preferred medication, then turn it on.  I guess it heats the water up, but,
> is any of that water going to mix with my EIS?  Or does it just heat
> something up independently to the medication?  The old Nebuliser I have had
> for years doesn't take any water, so how do these little things work?
>
> Yeah, I know, I'm a dumb_rse, so humour me.  The little 'manual' talks
> about heat, which I guess is the water being heated?  I don't want to
> dilute my EIS.  My old one, you just put the medication in a little cup,
> turn it on and it's good to go.
>
> N.
>
>


Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread MaryAnn Helland
 I missed something, somewhere along the line -- what nebulizer is being 
discussed here?  Thanks.MA
On Tuesday, March 24, 2020, 07:11:35 AM CDT, Ode Coyote 
 wrote:  
 
 What Dan said...right onOde

On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 1:31 AM Dan Nave  wrote:

Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...
Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat above 
the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."The ultrasonic 
vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work, so you have to fill 
distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where the clear plastic 
starts.  Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert 
that into the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it 
sealed properly.  The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be 
nebulized away from the vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it 
up.  Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using. This 
vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to "jump" into the 
air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.  Be careful installing the 
top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat fussy...
Hope that helps.
Dan
On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 9:43 PM Neville Munn  wrote:

These little Nebulisers.
They say put water in the bottom bowl, insert medicine cup with your preferred 
medication, then turn it on.  I guess it heats the water up, but, is any of 
that water going to mix with my EIS?  Or does it just heat something up 
independently to the medication?  The old Nebuliser I have had for years 
doesn't take any water, so how do these little things work?
Yeah, I know, I'm a dumb_rse, so humour me.  The little 'manual' talks about 
heat, which I guess is the water being heated?  I don't want to dilute my EIS.  
My old one, you just put the medication in a little cup, turn it on and it's 
good to go.
N.

  

Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread Ode Coyote
What Dan said...right on
Ode

On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 1:31 AM Dan Nave  wrote:

> Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...
>
> Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
> Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat
> above the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."
> The ultrasonic vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work,
> so you have to fill distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where
> the clear plastic starts.
> Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert that
> into the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it
> sealed properly.
> The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be nebulized away
> from the vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it up.
> Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using.
> This vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to
> "jump" into the air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.
> Be careful installing the top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat
> fussy...
>
> Hope that helps.
>
> Dan
>
> On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 9:43 PM Neville Munn 
> wrote:
>
>> These little Nebulisers.
>>
>> They say put water in the bottom bowl, insert medicine cup with your
>> preferred medication, then turn it on.  I guess it heats the water up, but,
>> is any of that water going to mix with my EIS?  Or does it just heat
>> something up independently to the medication?  The old Nebuliser I have had
>> for years doesn't take any water, so how do these little things work?
>>
>> Yeah, I know, I'm a dumb_rse, so humour me.  The little 'manual' talks
>> about heat, which I guess is the water being heated?  I don't want to
>> dilute my EIS.  My old one, you just put the medication in a little cup,
>> turn it on and it's good to go.
>>
>> N.
>>
>


Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread Reid Harvey
Dan,

Thanks for a really good explanation but I don't believe there was anything
in either Neville's questions or mine that should have scared you.  In both
cases we were not familiar and were asking for such an explanation as the
one that you were so helpful in giving.

On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 1:31 AM Dan Nave  wrote:

> Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...
>
> Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
> Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat
> above the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."
> The ultrasonic vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work,
> so you have to fill distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where
> the clear plastic starts.
> Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert that
> into the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it
> sealed properly.
> The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be nebulized away
> from the vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it up.
> Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using.
> This vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to
> "jump" into the air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.
> Be careful installing the top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat
> fussy...
>
> Hope that helps.
>
> Dan
>
> On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 9:43 PM Neville Munn 
> wrote:
>
>> These little Nebulisers.
>>
>> They say put water in the bottom bowl, insert medicine cup with your
>> preferred medication, then turn it on.  I guess it heats the water up, but,
>> is any of that water going to mix with my EIS?  Or does it just heat
>> something up independently to the medication?  The old Nebuliser I have had
>> for years doesn't take any water, so how do these little things work?
>>
>> Yeah, I know, I'm a dumb_rse, so humour me.  The little 'manual' talks
>> about heat, which I guess is the water being heated?  I don't want to
>> dilute my EIS.  My old one, you just put the medication in a little cup,
>> turn it on and it's good to go.
>>
>> N.
>>
>


Re: CS>The MY 520S

2020-03-24 Thread Neville Munn
Ha ha ha, Sorry Dan, you can stop slapping your forehead now...LOL. OK, I get 
it now, I just couldn't understand how the danged thing worked.

I put water in the 'unit', then put the medication 'cup' in, (with that rubber 
ring), and when I turned it on, I could see the 'medication' jumping all over 
the place.  I couldn't see how the danged thing worked.  Now I get it, that 
little cup sits *on top* of that little 'tower' in the unit, where the water 
is, and 'bumps' against the bottom of the medication cup, hence the medication 
jumps all over the place and causes mist.  The heat they are talking about must 
the temperature of water I figure, DON'T put hot water in it .

LOL, I did say I was a numpty...LOL.  Thanks mate.

OK, I'm ready to go, bring it on, gimme your best shot Corona "90210" thing, 
.  I got the old big one, now I have one for her who must be obeyed...LOL, 
if needed or backup.  It certainly pushes out some mist doesn't it, and I 
noticed it has an auto shut off as well, so you can re-start it again if you 
want.  What a great little gizmo.  Me and modern technology never were friends.

N.


From: Dan Nave 
Sent: Tuesday, 24 March 2020 4:30 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Subject: Re: CS>The MY 520S

Neville, you and Reid are starting to scare me...

Ultrasonic nebulizers do not heat or boil the liquid to be nebulized.
Ultrasonic nebulizers work by vibrating at a frequency that is somewhat above 
the normal sound range for hearing, hence "ultra-sonic."
The ultrasonic vibrations must travel through a liquid for this to work, so you 
have to fill distilled water in the nebulizer up to the level where the clear 
plastic starts.
Then you fill your CS in the bottom half of the little cup and insert that into 
the unit.  There is a sealing ring that you install on top to keep it sealed 
properly.
The point of the little cup is to keep the liquid to be nebulized away from the 
vibrating part of the nebulizer so it doesn't gum it up.
Also, it lets you use less of the CS or whatever you are using.
This vibrating causes tiny particles on the surface of the liquid to "jump" 
into the air, so to speak, and float in the air as a mist.
Be careful installing the top of the nebulizer because it is somewhat fussy...

Hope that helps.

Dan