Guest Posted December 27, 2011 Posted December 27, 2011 This may have been posted up on here already but if not may be worth a look !!!! https://www.wcpo.com/dpp/news/region_west_cincinnati/west_other/collector-of-a-million-70s-records-hopes-a-buyer-will-end-his-house-arrest
Dave Pinch Posted December 27, 2011 Posted December 27, 2011 i bet a few have contacted him already.looks to be mainly lp`s tho 1
Robbk Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 I had to remove my record collection from my flat in L.A. because the owner claimed his insurance company said it was a fire hazard, and threatened to withdraw their insurance policy to the whole 90-unit apartment complex, if I didn't remove them. I moved out within a month.
Derek Pearson Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Bet there's quite a few long time UK collectors on here with massive massive collections whoes homes must be some sort of fire risk going by this news report. It would be interesting to know how US home fire regulations compare with the UK's though. Never noticed any sort of clauses regarding possible fire risks on my Home Buildings and Contents Insurance which is renewed annually. If I think on I'll have a look. That's not saying that my collection is that massive in the first place hahaha. derek
Guest rosies dad Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Those Stax boxes are pretty neat looking. Wouldn't mind having some of those.
boba Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Those Stax boxes are pretty neat looking. Wouldn't mind having some of those. if you just want an empty box, I'm sure river records in memphis has some, ask a memphis dude to get you one.
Kris Holmes Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 bet the Stax boxes in the warehouse are all Lena Zavaroni deadstock 1
boba Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 bet the Stax boxes in the warehouse are all Lena Zavaroni deadstock i've been buying random (yellow) stax numbers recently, they're all like white garbage, with no pleasant surprises
Steve G Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Yeah Boba, I collected Stax as well, sure is some crap amongst the gems....We could do a thread "The worst of Stax" and see who can find the worst one Ha! The Stax box looks god though. As for the warehouse I bet it's all C&W.
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Hi there for what it's worth I have to say that that this is an over reaction by the fire department , I have worked in the recycling industry all my life dealing with plastics , cardboard , paper ect .I'm telling you all if most of those records are vinyl and not styrene there is little or no risk they could smoulder if an excellerant was used but you'd need a lot of petrol and even then they wouldn't burn .I spoke to a distributor I use in the U.K about the fire at Sony's wharehouse during the summer riots the fire was very intence as we all saw on the news however this was the polycarbonate C.D.s and if there were games this would have ment polypropylene packaging mixed with wooden pallets and shrink wrap.I think a good compramise could be if the building was removed of any rubbish , the records were stacked with a flame retardant covering and the place totaly sealed up to prevent arsonists ect ( who after seeing the clip on the news will by now be filling the petrol cans up and buying new film for thier cameras ) personly what I'd do is offer everything that wasn't rare at say a couple of dollars and cop the cash then if I owned the building flog that and go on the piss regards Fireman Sam.
Guest Matt Male Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 (edited) The majority are probably LPs, and probably mostly rubbish. But without searching through, who would ever know eh? Would anyone on here dare to dump the lot in a landfill without at least a day looking through? I couldn't live with myself without having a look first. Edited December 28, 2011 by Matt Male
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 The majority are probably LPs, and probably mostly rubbish. But without searching through, who would ever know eh? Would anyone on here dare to dump the lot in a landfill without at least a day looking through? I couldn't live with myself without having a look first. Matt you'd have to look at each one but sometimes if your under pressure you'll do spur of the moment decicions a bit like cleaning a shed out then buying a new tool a couple of day's later to replace the one you chucked out .regards S
boba Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 does excellerent make the records more excellent?
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 does excellerent make the records more excellent? Boba don't you ever sleep mate ? by the way I was wondering if the fire department were really intrested in the guy being forced out so they could take the building and develop it for the fire sevice with them being next door ? please note this is not an accusation as I know that Americans don't deliberatly annex peoples property and this is by no means the reflection of the soul source crew but an idea from myself happy new year and best regards Fireman Sam
Guest Nick Harrison Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 i've been buying random (yellow) stax numbers recently, they're all like white garbage, with no pleasant surprises Look for the much later Stax soul outputs distributed by Fantasy Records out of Berkeley California.
Steve G Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Look for the much later Stax soul outputs distributed by Fantasy Records out of Berkeley California. Yeah not too many duffers on Mauve Stax Nick. Only a couple in fact. I am sure records are a fire hazard vinyl or styrene Fireman Sam. That being said the place does look dirty and dangerous
Sleeps45 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 they call it kindle I call it a gold mine!
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 (edited) Yeah not too many duffers on Mauve Stax Nick. Only a couple in fact. I am sure records are a fire hazard vinyl or styrene Fireman Sam. That being said the place does look dirty and dangerous Hi Steve I had a factory unit just for storage of work stuff and I had 20,000 45's in there the unit went up in flames with bales of plastic , drums of diesel ,pallets ect I lost less than 5 45's this was witnessed by Charles Griffen ( insurance consultant ) and Sam moore .Anyone wishing to prove or disprove this get an old 45 (vinyl ) and put a match to it don't breath the smoke in it as it contains amongst other thing's dioxine also in the plastic's industry vinyl can be used as a flame retarder in materials such as A.B.S ect.However for the purposes of the gready insurance company's who are as bad as the banking industry that have shattered the knee cap's of the working man with thier black mailing tactics in the plastics industry I'm told that if plastic is used on site it's plastic so the insurance company can charge what they like regardless of whether the material is flamable or not.It's a pity these people are so gready.regards Twisted fire starter. Edited December 28, 2011 by sharmo 1
Steve G Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Having never set light to a record I'll bow to your superior knowledge on this one Simon and let you set the 'record straight' (if you pardon the pun).....but always thought vinyl was highly flammable - maybe been reading to many insurance manuals :
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Having never set light to a record I'll bow to your superior knowledge on this one Simon and let you set the 'record straight' (if you pardon the pun).....but always thought vinyl was highly flammable - maybe been reading to many insurance manuals : Hi Steve I've just set fire to a crappy old box of funk records by some group called the Hopkins brothers or something like that only burned with petrol.However a manual is a manual so you must also be right I''ll get you a pint when I see you happy new year Simon P.S some one just told me you were in the insurance industry the comments were not directed at you personly and I apologise for any offence I may have caused you this is a genuine and public apology and hope that you understand it was nothing personel to you.Although you have to be aware that a lot of people and not just the general public but people in business struggle to accept the constant rise in premiums ect .I realise that your position in the industry is way above insuring mini's for a first time driver and hope that you could some day try and make people below you understand how people feel , I know that you are into the big time scenes and you must have earned your stripes on the way up after many bloody encounters and take my hat off to you with best regards Simon.
Robbk Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 I doubt that vinyl records are a true fire hazard. I think that my building's owners just used that as an excuse to force me out of my flat, as they had plans to tear down the buildings and build new townhomes on that property and would have otherwise been forced to pay me thousands of dollars, had I remained there till the official announcement that the buildings would be torn down. I've had thousands of vinyl records in several other locations and insurance adjusters never mentioned that as a problem.
Steve G Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 (edited) Hi Steve I've just set fire to a crappy old box of funk records by some group called the Hopkins brothers or something like that only burned with petrol.However a manual is a manual so you must also be right I''ll get you a pint when I see you happy new year Simon P.S some one just told me you were in the insurance industry the comments were not directed at you personly and I apologise for any offence I may have caused you this is a genuine and public apology and hope that you understand it was nothing personel to you.Although you have to be aware that a lot of people and not just the general public but people in business struggle to accept the constant rise in premiums ect .I realise that your position in the industry is way above insuring mini's for a first time driver and hope that you could some day try and make people below you understand how people feel , I know that you are into the big time scenes and you must have earned your stripes on the way up after many bloody encounters and take my hat off to you with best regards Simon. Hi Simon, I know they're as mad as a bunch of hatters. I can't get any sense out of them and I saw that goon from ABI on the news today going on about flood insurance and why the industry won't insure people who live in flood prone areas. You are right though I'm more of your disaster man, Katrina, 9/11, that type of thing. That's why I was in Japan in November. Edited December 28, 2011 by Steve G
Ian Dewhirst Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 Hi Simon, I know they're as mad as a bunch of hatters. I can't get any sense out of them and I saw that goon from ABI on the news today going on about flood insurance and why the industry won't insure people who live in flood prone areas. Hey Steve, Happy New Year! Purely out of curiosity why would an insurance company insure people in flood prone areas? If the area is flood prone it wouldn't be a particularly good bet to insure would it? Ian D
Steve G Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 No Ian, but i think the concern is that there is too much rating by computer rather than good old calculated risk / human judgment.....HNY to you too!
MotownDave Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 right i can now state with absolute certainty that vinyl records will not burn (cos i just tryed ...lol)in fact if you hold a flame to them they melt a bit but remove the flame and they do not burn on...thanks simon it was a challenge i had to take on all the best happy new year to all Dave T
Ian Dewhirst Posted December 28, 2011 Posted December 28, 2011 right i can now state with absolute certainty that vinyl records will not burn (cos i just tryed ...lol)in fact if you hold a flame to them they melt a bit but remove the flame and they do not burn on...thanks simon it was a challenge i had to take on all the best happy new year to all Dave T I think Pete Smith tried this with the Carstairs and had a similar result didn't he....? Ian D
Guest ScooterNik Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I think he's been trying repeatedly for several years TBH....
Guest allnightandy Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I think Pete Smith tried this with the Carstairs and had a similar result didn't he....? Ian D They shrivel up into little ashtrays As the late Dave McCadden Would have testified regarding , Richard Searlings copy of "The Jades I'm Where It's At" LOL x 10
boba Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 right i can now state with absolute certainty that vinyl records will not burn (cos i just tryed ...lol)in fact if you hold a flame to them they melt a bit but remove the flame and they do not burn on...thanks simon it was a challenge i had to take on all the best happy new year to all Dave T I think they do burn, it just has to be a very high temperature. When they do, they burn very hot and release toxic chemicals. It's like a tire fire. Someone on another message board posted that they looked inside the windows and saw entire palettes of like the same record (e.g. there was a palette of sealed isaac hayes tough guys soundtrack). There still has to be some good stuff given the quantity though.
Steve G Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 (edited) I think you might have a point Bob. Holding a match to something is different from exposing it to a hot fire for a period of time. Some substances don't 'take' until they reach a certain temperature I seem to remember reading when I was errrrr 18. Just out of interest which record did you try and set light to Motown Dave? The Carstairs is styrene I seem to recall, so should burn like a gas station if the accounts on this page are accurate. Maybe Pete didn't get the temperature hot enough, and hey maybe we need a controlled experiment at an allnighter with some boxes of unsellable or overplayed 'northern' that don't seem to change from one decade to the next : (That's a joke by the way). But at least that'll prove it one way or another. Edited December 29, 2011 by Steve G
Sheldonsoul Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 They shrivel up into little ashtrays As the late Dave McCadden Would have testified regarding , Richard Searlings copy of "The Jades I'm Where It's At" LOL x 10 .
Sheldonsoul Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I can confirm also that they shrivel up and look like ashtrays,my mate had a record late 70s ,can't even recall what it was, he knew I wanted it but had no cash,so he proceeded to to put a lighter to it in the middle of the pub,some mate eh
MotownDave Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 purely in the intrest of science i'll try again later with the oxy acetylene and report back atb Dave T
boba Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I can confirm also that they shrivel up and look like ashtrays,my mate had a record late 70s ,can't even recall what it was, he knew I wanted it but had no cash,so he proceeded to to put a lighter to it in the middle of the pub,some mate eh sure, a certain temperature will make the vinyl not solid and start bending. but a higher temperature (probably more than you could achieve with your lighter) will make the vinyl catch on fire. Look here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_acetate There is something called the "autoignition temperature" and it's 427 celsius. Admittedly I'm not a scientist and could be misinterpreting that, but you would have to heat up the vinyl very hot to 427 degrees before it caught fire.
Spacehopper Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 and wouldn't tightly stacked in boxes or on shelves be harder than say a pile tipped out on the floor?
Ezzie Brown Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 i watched the news report on youtube with steve green.............and we are sure we saw des parker and johnny beggs peeping out of one of the wharehouse windows behind the reporter.............................................. ez
Dave Pinch Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I think Pete Smith tried this with the Carstairs and had a similar result didn't he....? Ian D yes i think he ended up sinkin his teeth into it coz the bloody thing wouldnt burn
MotownDave Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 right now i have tried with an oxy-acetylene torch and whilst you hold the flame to the vinyl it burns(and does produce some acrid smoke) once you remove the heat source the vinyl stops burning.now obviously i have only use one record so cant say how stacks of them would react,but it think you would need a sustained ignition source(eg ruptured gas main) for there to be a significant fire risk. atb Dave(burn it down)T
Guest Ste Brazil Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 I've just thrown a petrol bomb through my living room window, all my records are in there so i will let you know of the outcome of this experiment when i get out of jail for arson.
Guest giant Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 bet the Stax boxes in the warehouse are all Lena Zavaroni deadstock :lol:
Mrtag Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 bet the Stax boxes in the warehouse are all Lena Zavaroni deadstock You're probabley right ! !
Mrtag Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 (edited) I bet some U.S. record dealer is on the case as we speak!! Lol Edited December 29, 2011 by mrtag
Steve G Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 Leave Lena Zavaroni alone you lot. She used to live round here in an unheated flat and died an anorexic, in extreme poverty. Her's was actually a very sad story.
boba Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 right now i have tried with an oxy-acetylene torch and whilst you hold the flame to the vinyl it burns(and does produce some acrid smoke) once you remove the heat source the vinyl stops burning.now obviously i have only use one record so cant say how stacks of them would react,but it think you would need a sustained ignition source(eg ruptured gas main) for there to be a significant fire risk. atb Dave(burn it down)T I think you have to try with many more records. Maybe like a whole box or a whole shelf or something. Report back! 2
MotownDave Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 tell you what bob you send em over i'll burn em
Guest Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 guess the folks that owned 'Shrine' must have been very unlucky then.
boba Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 tell you what bob you send em over i'll burn em I definitely have boxes of garbage records that should be burned. Too expensive to ship though.
boba Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 guess the folks that owned 'Shrine' must have been very unlucky then. Shrine records are all styrene, not vinyl. I think polystyrene is much more flammable actually.
Guest sharmo 1 Posted December 29, 2011 Posted December 29, 2011 Shrine records are all styrene, not vinyl. I think polystyrene is much more flammable actually. Yes it is Boba
Steve G Posted December 30, 2011 Posted December 30, 2011 Shrine records are all styrene, not vinyl. I think polystyrene is much more flammable actually. Loads of yellow and mauve Stax records were on styrene though weren't they.
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