Cryo'ed LP's


I'm getting ready to cryo a boat load of gear and was thinking about getting some of my best vinyl done. Anyone done this? If so what were your results?

If you have not done this to your LP's I'd rather not hear how lame this idea sounds... I'm sure I will anyway.
128x128srwooten
Cryo treated a new SSD hard drive for Mach2Music Mac mini music server and bit the dust. My advice cryo wire and careful with all the rest.
How ever I ordered a new SME IV.vi and I'm
going to have cryo treated
Color me dumb- I believe in cryo for some things, but what are the presumed benefits for vinyl? Less noise, longer wearing?
Is there any benefit to having oneself cryo'd? I mean, one of the most important components in the chain is the listener so perhaps I will send myself in for cryo-ing. My room is cryo'd, I live in minnesota and can't afford to pay my heating bill because of all of the audio tweaks I have purchased.

On a more serious note, other than static and magnitism that can occur on some vinyl, vinyl records are a mechanical device and not an electical one, the cartridge is the device that turns mechanical energy into electical energy. I can think of no mechanical benefit to cryo of the LP but I do admit I do not know everything. (I may though after I get cryo'd)
David
I can only think of bad things that can happen, like the process will permanently deform the grooves, etc. And I cannot imagine the rationale for it. By all means, try it and tell us what happens. But keep your 6-eyes and your original Blue Notes out of the freezer for now, is my advice.
A possible explanation for why cryoing improves LP performance is the same reason it improves the performance of golf balls, rifle barrels, automotive engine cam shafts, trumpets, not to mention tonearms, turntable platters, CDs, interconnects, structural rods and shelves of audio racks, etc.