Your question is very open-ended and general. So you have 2 routes to
educate yourself and home in on issues for which you need clarification..
First is to read the archives..
Second is to use the internet to research "colloidal silver".
Personally I would go the internet route. In any case jot
This might be a good time to remind members of traps set regarding
individuals and recommendations for treatments. This one the one I am
replying to, reminds me of that. Just to keep from being targeted for
overstepping ourselves and treading where the mighty Pharm claims
territory. Just saying
Hi...what do you know so far?Debbie
On Wednesday, May 4, 2016 10:19 AM, tsokwaaluandeyaba
wrote:
I am Tsokwa Alu Andeyaba, a Nigerian and a public servant. I want to learn
more and everything about colloidal silver. I hope your group will help achieve
Yup, just like a good meter that doesn't detect everything is *pretty
good* and the two methods come out close to each other...pretty muchin
line with an actual test.
..like two 4 foot tall doors into the same dimly lit room . You can get
in, but ya gotta duck a little and once in,
Yep, that is what I do now. I have found that if I read the solution as
soon as I turn it off, the reading agrees with my Faraday calcs, so I
happily use the uS reading for the ppm. It is much faster, and as
accurate as I want to get. It doesn't matter a whole lot anyway as long
as there is
On Aug 16, 2008, at 12:20 PM, Ode Coyote wrote:
Farady doesn't account for where the silver is or what form it's in,
so it's no better than a meter.
Faraday's Law is the upper limit of how much silver will go into
solution, whether it is silver oxide, silver ions, or what have you.
The
Hi, Steve,
They are all making ionic silver, referred to around as Electrically
Isolated Silver, aka colloidal silver. And most would say, yes, it is
good enough.
Kathryn
On Aug 15, 2008, at 8:07 PM, Norton, Steve wrote:
I was wondering if you could even calibrate a TDS meter to
Farady doesn't account for where the silver is or what form it's in, so
it's no better than a meter.
I'm happy with the meter and knowing what it does so i can fudge the
numbers closer to reality.
ode
Surely someone has written a program to do the Faraday Calculation.
I could do it and
- Original Message -
From: Wayne Fugitt cwa...@netdoor.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 8:27 PM
Subject: CS( Unidentified subject) Why not identify it. ppm meters.
Evening Faith,
At 06:01 PM 8/15/2008, you wrote:
Steve, what measures ppm? I know it's
I was wondering if you could even calibrate a TDS meter to accurately measure
the colloidal silver ppm. Won't each CS generate some ionic silver that is
unpredictable that will affect the measurements. I assume that a rough but fast
estimate is the best you will ever do within a reasonable
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