Re: CS>OT - Lugol's solution 7%

2017-07-27 Thread Gregory Schaller
I have only seen Lugols 2% and Lugols 5% ...

  From: Deborah Gerard 
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Thursday, July 27, 2017 5:09 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>OT - Lugol's solution 7%
   


Terry Chamberlin sells it too...
On ‎Thursday‎, ‎July‎ ‎27‎, ‎2017‎ ‎04‎:‎54‎:‎26‎ ‎PM‎ ‎EDT, PT Ferrance 
 wrote:

Hi, Does anyone have a supplier for Lugol's 7% or at least a brand?  I 
originally purchased from Tel but that is sadly no longer an option.  I found 
it on ebay but am a little concerned about purchasing something like this on 
ebay.
Thanks.  PT



   

Re: CSnebulizer

2014-11-30 Thread Gregory Schaller
What are your recommendations for a nebulizer (brand, model, url if poss)?
Thank you,
GS

  From: PT Ferrance ptf2...@bellsouth.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2014 6:27 AM
 Subject: Re: CSnebulizer
   
Thanks, Ode.  Any dos or don'ts for nebulizing?PT 

 From: Ode Coyote odecoy...@silverpuppy.com
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2014 8:31 AM
 Subject: Re: CSnebulizer
   
 Next best thing to an injection.
 
 Ode
 
 
 

On 11/29/2014 5:53 PM, PT Ferrance wrote:
  
  Maybe I'm just being a wuss about this but no one in my family growing up 
ever had breathing problems so I never saw a nebulizer being used. 
  I'm trying to get some EIS into my system without having to go through the GI 
system so I thought nebulizing would work. I would appreciate any guidance 
people who have used this method can give. Thanks. PT
    
   
 
 


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Re: CSChecking distilled water quality

2013-06-04 Thread Gregory Schaller
James, on the COM-100 can it be used to test for purity of distilled water
as well as strength (ppm or other) of CS solution?

Your answer greatly appreciated,

GS



 From: James McDonald kscma...@yahoo.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Tuesday, June 4, 2013 5:02 PM
Subject: Re: CSChecking distilled water quality
 


I use a COM-100 EC/TDS/TEMP tester by HM Digital and would recommend this 
tester. It works very well and has three different non-linear EC-to-TDS 
conversion factors (KCl, 442TM, NaCl) as well as temp.





 From: Jason ja...@eytonsearth.org
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Tuesday, June 4, 2013 2:11 PM
Subject: Re: CSChecking distilled water quality
 

Hi Andreas:

What is the conductance tester you are using?  I only have experience 
with a PWT (which is designed to test pure water).

It really shouldn't be off the chart.  Any PWT or TDS meter should be 
able to read close to 1000 PPM.

FYI:  Rinsing with distilled water won't remove any actual residue in 
the glass container.

To ensure total cleanliness:

1.  Use a bit of 3% H2O2 in teh glass container, and wipe down 
thoroughly with a clean white paper towel.  Leave a tiny amount of H2O2 
in place for a few minutes before drying.

2.  Rinse with distilled water

3.  Dry with a clean white paper towel.

4.  If you're a stickler for details, rinse once more with a tiny amount 
of distilled water (to remove any tiny fibers from the paper towel).

I never use any type of soap
 product in any container I plan on brewing 
CS in.

There are alot of contaminants that may not affect conductivity. 
However, distilled water is regulated, and while I don't agree with the 
current standards, contamination shouldn't be a great issue.

~Jason

On 6/4/2013 10:58 AM, Andreas Hahn wrote:
 Hi Jason,
 Thanks for the fast reply. Since the bottle of store bought stuff says
 not for drinking, are there any unhealthy contaminants that would
 still pass the conductivity test?

 The brewed CS is too conductive for my conductance tester, using an
 ohmmeter produces a resistance of around 40k ohms. I did wash out the
 glass in question thoroughly and then rinsed it with distilled water
 before brewing, so there's little chance of anything substantial having
 stayed behind on the glass.


 On Tue, 4 Jun 2013, Jason
 wrote:

 Hi Andreas:

 A PWT reading of 0.5 uS is great...  perfect for making CS.

 You can also check the pH (although I'm usually dissapointed with
 store bought water pH) if you're worried about the quality.

 The distilled water that I make at home is 0.3 uS, pH ~7.0.

 I think that most of the commercial steam distillers must leave their
 production vessels open to air, as it usually tests acidic.  However,
 CO2 doesn't seem to really affect the production process, unless high
 voltage is used (which pulls nitrogen from the air into the water,
 also making the end product acidic).

 Most home brew production setups result in some oxidized silver
 residue settling on the bottom of the container.

 Test the conductivity of your
 final brew to be certain that your
 container didn't have some residue, and then use a laser light to look
 for particulate silver (and see how many, if any, large particles of
 silver are in the brew).

 It's not a perfect science, but with practice you'll be able to tell a
 fantastic batch of CS in comparison to a mediocre (or bad) batch.

 Kind Regards,

 Jason


 On 6/4/2013 10:23 AM, Andreas Hahn wrote:
 Hi,
 I would like to use store-bought distilled water for making CS. Testing
 with a conductance meter reveals very low conductance (0.5
 microsiemens). Is there any other thing to check?

 I made about 200ml CS in a glass with it and it produced a brownish
 particulate residue that settled to the bottom.
 I'm not experienced with
 making CS, so I don't know whether this is normal or indicative of bad
 water.



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Re: CSnatural blood thinners . . .

2013-03-04 Thread Gregory Schaller
contrary to popular belief, blood thinners do not THIN the blood
taking blood thinners (eg aspirin, coumadin, etc.) do not thin the blood

what blood thinners do is either impair platelet functioning or impair 
clotting factor production/function
taking blood thinners does NOT make blood thinner (more watery)
increasing fluid intake can reduce dehydration, reducing hematocrit, which is 
the lab number for liquid to solid ratio of the blood -
a lower hematocrit # translates into more liquid blood with less solid (blood 
cells) in it 

many health care professionals mislead the public by using the words blood 
thinner and 
in my experience many health care professionals don't even understand the 
concept themselves

there is likely a limit to how watery one can make blood,
as the kidneys are designed to regulate the amount of water in the body via 
various feedback loops ...
damaged kidneys can impair body water regulation (as can damage to the 
endocrine system 
which is involved in messaging body hydration throughout the organism

please folks, use the term blood thinning accurately
do some research; google platelet function (such as platelet aggregation) and 
google clotting factors or clotting factor cascade

GS



 From: ejohns9...@aol.com ejohns9...@aol.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Monday, March 4, 2013 6:31 PM
Subject: Re: CSnatural blood thinners . . .
 

Vit E helps thin blood
 
Edith
-Original Message-
From: Dan Nave bhangcha...@gmail.com
To: silver-list silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, Mar 4, 2013 3:21 pm
Subject: Re: CSnatural blood thinners . . .


Note that Vitamin K helps with blood clotting, not blood thinning... Dan On 
Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 12:34 PM, Judy Knowlton
judydownma...@roadrunner.com wrote:
 Check on google, foods to AVOID on coumadin
 Foods rich in Viamin K
 Vitamin K is abundant in green tea, leafy greens, such as Swiss chard,
 kale, parsley and spinach, broccoli and cauliflower, Brussels sprouts,
 liver, soybean oil and wheat bran. Fermented dairy, including yogurt,
 cheeses, and fermented soy including miso and natto,
 garlic
 dried fruit
 fish
 leafy green vegitables
  alcohol
 natokinase


 Vitamin K is abundant in green tea, leafy greens, such as Swiss chard,
 kale, parsley and spinach, broccoli and cauliflower, Brussels sprouts,
 liver, soybean oil and wheat bran. Fermented dairy, including yogurt,
 cheeses, and fermented soy including miso and natto,


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CSrecommendations on CS books

2013-02-28 Thread Gregory Schaller
Hi

I am looking for recommendations on CS books ...
if I only get one book, what is the best book?
I notice some of the books are very pricey ...

Thank you,
GS


Re: CSrecommendations on CS books

2013-02-28 Thread Gregory Schaller
Thank you,
I was hoping for more specifics such as which title, which author is 
recommended.
GS



 From: Smitty papad...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 7:40 PM
Subject: Re: CSrecommendations on CS books
 

Go to Amazon.com
They have inexpensive used books.
Put *CS* in their search block.



On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 4:36 PM, Gregory Schaller sky_wav...@yahoo.com wrote:

Hi


I am looking for recommendations on CS books ...
if I only get one book, what is the best book?
I notice some of the books are very pricey ...


Thank you,
GS