RE: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread Neville Munn

Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about that 'stuff' 
accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can ...knock a little bit 
of the stuff off
 
N.
 
 Subject: CSfiltering CS
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
 Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +
 
 After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that 
 builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in 
 little balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or 
 will that degrade the product in anyway? I am talking about a paper coffee 
 filter. 
 Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless 
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 ,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸ÞrÛ§²æìr¸›x
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Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread Anthony Cullingworth
Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides knocking 
the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other detrimental 
effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

Anthony 


  - Original Message - 
  From: Neville Munn 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 4:47 AM
  Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS


  Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about that 
'stuff' accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can ...knock a 
little bit of the stuff off
   
  N.
   
   Subject: CSfiltering CS
   To: silver-list@eskimo.com
   From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
   Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +
   
   After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that 
builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in little 
balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or will that 
degrade the product in anyway? I am talking about a paper coffee filter. 
   Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless 
handheldN’Š[Þ¬¸¬¶+š‡^­«^uú+ºgè­Ø¬rë,Šx¢Yh‰Ö¥J)oz´n•ë�Ò'²ÚîrبžÈm¶Ÿÿà 
,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸ÞrÛ§²æìr¸›x
   ܆+Þ²m§ÿðà 
šŠV«r¯yÊþÈ¥½êåŠË^²H¦¡Êþf¢–X¬¶f”çßNŠbqجrë,Š‰ì™¨¥¶‹–÷«¡÷í¢˜œ–+-zÉš‡(˜¸¬´ì'z³‘àÞ¾‹«™¨¥¶‰�zú.­ë$Šj¢


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The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

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Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread jaxi
What are you using to make your EIS?  I use a puppy and have it alternate
polarities.  This greatly minimizes any build-up.  And the wee bit that it
does still create I just let settle into the bottom of the jar.  I use those
types of dregs for making up my hand soap and things like that where such
stuff doesn't matter as it is mostly an ascetics issue.

Jaxi

On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Anthony Cullingworth 
anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net wrote:

  Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides
 knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other
 detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

 Anthony



  - Original Message -
 *From:* Neville Munn one.red...@hotmail.com
 *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com
   *Sent:* Friday, May 20, 2011 4:47 AM
 *Subject:* RE: CSfiltering CS

 Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about that
 'stuff' accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can ...knock a
 little bit of the stuff off

 N.

  Subject: CSfiltering CS
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
  Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +
 
  After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that
 builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in
 little balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or
 will that degrade the product in anyway? I am talking about a paper coffee
 filter.
  Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheldN ’Š[Þ¬¸¬¶+
 š‡^­«^uú+ºgè­Ø¬rë,Šx ¢Yh‰Ö¥J)oz´n•ë Ò'²ÚîrبžÈm¶ŸÿÃ
 ,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸ÞrÛ§²æìr¸›x
  ܆+Þ² m§ÿðà šŠV«r ¯yÊþÈ¥½êåŠË^²H¦¡Êþf¢–X¬¶
 f”çßNŠbqجrë,Š‰ì™¨¥¶‹–÷«¡÷í¢˜œ–+-zÉš‡(˜¸¬´ì'z³‘àÞ¾‹«™¨¥¶‰ zú.­ë$Šj ¢


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Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread Anthony Cullingworth
I am using a SilverGen  SG6. 
  From: jaxi 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 8:40 AM
  Subject: Re: CSfiltering CS


  What are you using to make your EIS?  I use a puppy and have it alternate 
polarities.  This greatly minimizes any build-up.  And the wee bit that it does 
still create I just let settle into the bottom of the jar.  I use those types 
of dregs for making up my hand soap and things like that where such stuff 
doesn't matter as it is mostly an ascetics issue.

  Jaxi


  On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Anthony Cullingworth 
anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net wrote:

Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides 
knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other 
detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

Anthony 

 
  - Original Message - 
  From: Neville Munn 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 4:47 AM
  Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS


  Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about that 
'stuff' accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can ...knock a 
little bit of the stuff off
   
  N.
   
   Subject: CSfiltering CS
   To: silver-list@eskimo.com
   From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
   Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +
   
   After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that 
builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in little 
balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or will that 
degrade the product in anyway? I am talking about a paper coffee filter. 
   Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheldN ’Š[Þ¬¸¬¶+ 
š‡^­«^uú+ºgè­Ø¬rë,Šx ¢Yh‰Ö¥J)oz´n•ë Ò'²ÚîrبžÈm¶Ÿÿà 
,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸ÞrÛ§²æìr¸›x
   ܆+Þ² m§ÿðà šŠV«r ¯yÊþÈ¥½êåŠË^²H¦¡Êþf¢–X¬¶ 
f”çßNŠbqجrë,Š‰ì™¨¥¶‹–÷«¡÷í¢˜œ–+-zÉš‡(˜¸¬´ì'z³‘àÞ¾‹«™¨¥¶‰ zú.­ë$Šj ¢



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signature database 6137 (20110520) __

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Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread jaxi
I don't have that but you have the option of polarity switching with it
don't you?

On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 10:10 AM, Anthony Cullingworth 
anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net wrote:

  I am using a SilverGen  SG6.

 *From:* jaxi jaxi.sch...@gmail.com
  *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com
 *Sent:* Friday, May 20, 2011 8:40 AM
 *Subject:* Re: CSfiltering CS

 What are you using to make your EIS?  I use a puppy and have it alternate
 polarities.  This greatly minimizes any build-up.  And the wee bit that it
 does still create I just let settle into the bottom of the jar.  I use those
 types of dregs for making up my hand soap and things like that where such
 stuff doesn't matter as it is mostly an ascetics issue.

 Jaxi

 On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Anthony Cullingworth 
 anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net wrote:

  Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides
 knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other
 detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

 Anthony



  - Original Message -
 *From:* Neville Munn one.red...@hotmail.com
 *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com
   *Sent:* Friday, May 20, 2011 4:47 AM
 *Subject:* RE: CSfiltering CS

 Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about that
 'stuff' accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can ...knock a
 little bit of the stuff off

 N.

  Subject: CSfiltering CS
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
  Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +
 
  After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that
 builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in
 little balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or
 will that degrade the product in anyway? I am talking about a paper coffee
 filter.
  Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheldN ’Š[Þ¬¸¬¶+
 š‡^­«^uú+ºgè­Ø¬rë,Šx ¢Yh‰Ö¥J)oz´n•ë Ò'²ÚîrبžÈm¶ŸÿÃ
 ,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸ÞrÛ§²æìr¸›x
  ܆+Þ² m§ÿðà šŠV«r ¯yÊþÈ¥½êåŠË^²H¦¡Êþf¢–X¬¶
 f”çßNŠbqجrë,Š‰ì™¨¥¶‹–÷«¡÷í¢˜œ–+-zÉš‡(˜¸¬´ì'z³‘àÞ¾‹«™¨¥¶‰ zú.­ë$Šj ¢


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 signature database 6137 (20110520) __

 The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

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 The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

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RE: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread Neville Munn

Well, each to their own I spose, but suffice to say I never want to see any 
'stuff' build up on my electrodes.  No big deal necessarily I guess, just 
something I never want to see on my setup, which is why I clean my trodes at 
regular timed intervals, if they need it or not.  I don't have polarity 
reversal on my gear, I just swap the trodes over as I clean them.
 
Nothing detrimental either, you can filter it as you say, or leave it behind in 
the container.  If you've got another use for that residue that's fine, but if 
not, you got residue in the container serving no useful purpose.  I don't have 
a use for it personally, and I don't see a need to find a use for it, so I 
choose not to create any 'debris'.
 
N.



Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 08:35:49 -0600
From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
Subject: Re: CSfiltering CS
To: silver-list@eskimo.com





Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides knocking 
the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other detrimental 
effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?
 
Anthony   

Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-20 Thread Guyot Léna
My Silver Puppy shuts off automatically when the water has become CS  
but I've noticed that it shuts off much sooner if I've put the  
electrodes in when they're darkened. Now, I wipe them down after I  
take them out, just rub them clean with a paper towel, so they're  
ready for the next time.

Be well,
Léna
On May 20, 2011, at 10:35 AM, Anthony Cullingworth wrote:

Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides  
knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other  
detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?


Anthony


- Original Message -
From: Neville Munn
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 4:47 AM
Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS

Yes you could use a coffee filter, but I'd be more concerned about  
that 'stuff' accumulating on those trodes to a point whereby you can  
...knock a little bit of the stuff off


N.

 Subject: CSfiltering CS
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
 Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:37:42 +

 After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off  
that builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just  
clumps in little balls. Can I use a coffee filter to strain these  
little bits out or will that degrade the product in anyway? I am  
talking about a paper coffee filter.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheldN‚…[fi¬¸¬¶ 
+˚Ω^ «^uú+ºgè جrë,…x¢Yh≈Ö¥J)oz 
´nëˇÒ'”ÚîrبıÈm¶ƒÿà ,…[fi®X¬¶…àR{.nÇ 
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—ˆ÷«¡÷í¢˘˛ˆ+-zÉ˚Ω(˘¸¬´ì'z“Œàfi≤—«˙¨ 
¥¶≈ˇzú. ë$…j¢



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RE: CSfiltering CS vs polarity switching

2011-05-20 Thread SJY
I got tired of manually cleaning and swapping my CS generator electrodes.
So I converted my homemade generator to electrically swap polarity to the
electrodes about every 15 minutes.  I kept the same run time of 24 hours,
but I had to increase the constant current from about 0.2 ma to 0.3 ma to
end up with the same strength brew.  Now I NEVER need to clean or swap the
electrodes.  And no stuff sluffs off into the brew, so there is no need to
filter or carefully decant.

 

I highly recommend automatic polarity switching of current to CS generator
electrodes.

 

Steve Y.

 

  _  

From: Neville Munn [mailto:one.red...@hotmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 9:26 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS

 

Well, each to their own I spose, but suffice to say I never want to see any
'stuff' build up on my electrodes.  No big deal necessarily I guess, just
something I never want to see on my setup, which is why I clean my trodes at
regular timed intervals, if they need it or not.  I don't have polarity
reversal on my gear, I just swap the trodes over as I clean them.
 
Nothing detrimental either, you can filter it as you say, or leave it behind
in the container.  If you've got another use for that residue that's fine,
but if not, you got residue in the container serving no useful purpose.  I
don't have a use for it personally, and I don't see a need to find a use for
it, so I choose not to create any 'debris'.
 
N.

  _  

Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 08:35:49 -0600
From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
Subject: Re: CSfiltering CS
To: silver-list@eskimo.com

Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides
knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other
detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

 

Anthony 

  _  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1375 / Virus Database: 1509/3649 - Release Date: 05/20/11



Re: CSfiltering CS vs polarity switching

2011-05-20 Thread anthony . aquifer
is this something myself (an electrical illiterate) could do to a prepackaged 
unit (SilverGen SG6)?
 
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheld

-Original Message-
From: SJY you...@relia.net
Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 15:05:52 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Reply-to: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS vs polarity switching

I got tired of manually cleaning and swapping my CS generator electrodes.
So I converted my homemade generator to electrically swap polarity to the
electrodes about every 15 minutes.  I kept the same run time of 24 hours,
but I had to increase the constant current from about 0.2 ma to 0.3 ma to
end up with the same strength brew.  Now I NEVER need to clean or swap the
electrodes.  And no stuff sluffs off into the brew, so there is no need to
filter or carefully decant.

 

I highly recommend automatic polarity switching of current to CS generator
electrodes.

 

Steve Y.

 

  _  

From: Neville Munn [mailto:one.red...@hotmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 9:26 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CSfiltering CS

 

Well, each to their own I spose, but suffice to say I never want to see any
'stuff' build up on my electrodes.  No big deal necessarily I guess, just
something I never want to see on my setup, which is why I clean my trodes at
regular timed intervals, if they need it or not.  I don't have polarity
reversal on my gear, I just swap the trodes over as I clean them.
 
Nothing detrimental either, you can filter it as you say, or leave it behind
in the container.  If you've got another use for that residue that's fine,
but if not, you got residue in the container serving no useful purpose.  I
don't have a use for it personally, and I don't see a need to find a use for
it, so I choose not to create any 'debris'.
 
N.

  _  

Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 08:35:49 -0600
From: anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net
Subject: Re: CSfiltering CS
To: silver-list@eskimo.com

Should I be cleaning the trodes during the brewing process?  Besides
knocking the stuff off and creating debris in my CS is there any other
detrimental effects of having that stuff build up during a brew?

 

Anthony 

  _  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1375 / Virus Database: 1509/3649 - Release Date: 05/20/11




CSfiltering CS

2011-05-19 Thread anthony . aquifer
After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that builds 
up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in little balls.  
Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or will that degrade 
the product in anyway?  I am talking about a paper coffee filter. 
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless 
handheldN’Š[Þ¬¸¬¶+š‡^­«^uú+ºgè­Ø¬rë,Šx¢Yh‰Ö¥J)oz´n•ë�Ò'²ÚîrبžÈm¶ŸÿÃ
,Š[Þ®X¬¶ŠàR{.nÇ+‰·¦j)m¢È¥½êåŠËkz«ž²×¬’)¨r‰¬¹¸Þr

Re: CSfiltering CS

2011-05-19 Thread Smitty
I use a coffee filter to decant into a bottle
from the *maker* jar, pouring thru the filter.
Shouldn't degrade your CS.

Smitty

On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 11:37 AM, anthony.aqui...@sasktel.net wrote:

 After making my CS I sometimes knock a little bit of the stuff off that
 builds up on the trodes. It falls into the CS and kid of just clumps in
 little balls.  Can I use a coffee filter to strain these little bits out or
 will that degrade the product in anyway?  I am talking about a paper coffee
 filter.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheld


CSFiltering CS

2005-08-19 Thread Terry Chamberlin
Hello, I have just finished my first batch of CS. 
How long should i wait before filtering and use? 

Filter anytime (or don't even bother), use anytime.   






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Re: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Ode Coyote
  I don't think that stuff really matters.
The best way to remove it is to let it settle and decant.

Ode

At 09:48 AM 7/18/2004 -0700, you wrote: 

I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).

Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?

Thanks, 
Terry 

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CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Trem
Hi Steve,

You're correct about the surface particles.  They are probably only one atom 
thick
and are floating because of surface tension.  When I see them I'm reminded of 
an oil
sheen.  One drop of oil can cover a large surface and make one think it's more 
than
it really is.

I have found that if one just pours off (decants) into another container the 
surface
floaters just disappear.  Anyway there's nothing to worry about since it's all 
silver
and not a contaminant and the quantity is so infinitesimal it's not worth 
bothering
with.

The worst filters are Whatman.  It must be because of the extra chemical 
processing
to make them low ash and ultra pure.  Anyway, they really cause yellowing.  My
recommendation is NEVER filter.  Decanting is the best method.

Best regards,

Trem

- Original Message - 
From: SJY youngst...@konnections.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 8:44 PM
Subject: [trem] Re: CSFiltering CS


 Terry,

 Just let the particulates settle to the bottom - you might have to first
 stir to break surface tension if they are floating on the surface.  Then
 just carefully decant off the clear liquid and dump out the liquid  solid
 stuff at the bottom.  Filtering often adds more stuff then it takes out
 unless you have very good filter media (coffee filters seem to introduce
 chemicals into your brew - recommend not using them).
 --Steve Y.

 - Original Message -
 From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 10:48 AM
 Subject: CSFiltering CS


  I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS
  generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own CS
  (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting (roughly 5
  ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise clear liquid
  (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
 
  Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of
  filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
 
  Thanks,
  Terry
 
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 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html

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Re: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Dave
  You might use an Ice tea gallon jar to brew with and use the spigot 
on the side to decant off what you use. That way you don't have to worry 
about the contamination you can get from the coffee filters.

Dave

Terry wrote:
I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS 
generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own 
CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting 
(roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise clear 
liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).


Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of 
filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?


Thanks,
Terry

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RE: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Medwith, Robert
What about unbleached coffee filters (brown)
I have been using them for years.
Bob

-Original Message-
From: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com [mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com]
On Behalf Of Trem
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 10:31 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSFiltering CS


Hi Steve,

You're correct about the surface particles.  They are probably only one atom
thick and are floating because of surface tension.  When I see them I'm
reminded of an oil sheen.  One drop of oil can cover a large surface and
make one think it's more than it really is.

I have found that if one just pours off (decants) into another container the
surface floaters just disappear.  Anyway there's nothing to worry about
since it's all silver and not a contaminant and the quantity is so
infinitesimal it's not worth bothering with.

The worst filters are Whatman.  It must be because of the extra chemical
processing to make them low ash and ultra pure.  Anyway, they really cause
yellowing.  My recommendation is NEVER filter.  Decanting is the best
method.

Best regards,

Trem

- Original Message - 
From: SJY youngst...@konnections.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 8:44 PM
Subject: [trem] Re: CSFiltering CS


 Terry,

 Just let the particulates settle to the bottom - you might have to 
 first stir to break surface tension if they are floating on the 
 surface.  Then just carefully decant off the clear liquid and dump out 
 the liquid  solid stuff at the bottom.  Filtering often adds more 
 stuff then it takes out unless you have very good filter media (coffee 
 filters seem to introduce chemicals into your brew - recommend not 
 using them). --Steve Y.

 - Original Message -
 From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 10:48 AM
 Subject: CSFiltering CS


  I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS 
  generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my 
  own CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the 
  setting (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the 
  otherwise clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
 
  Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of 
  filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
 
  Thanks,
  Terry
 
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RE: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Terry
Trem:

Thanks for the information.  The particles I see are not floaters, but are
at (or near) the bottom.  Therefore decanting should work.  I gather though,
that even if a few of the particles are in my decanted fluid, they're not
harmful?

Terry

-Original Message-
From: Trem [mailto:t...@silvergen.com] 
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 7:31 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSFiltering CS


Hi Steve,

You're correct about the surface particles.  They are probably only one atom
thick and are floating because of surface tension.  When I see them I'm
reminded of an oil sheen.  One drop of oil can cover a large surface and
make one think it's more than it really is.

I have found that if one just pours off (decants) into another container the
surface floaters just disappear.  Anyway there's nothing to worry about
since it's all silver and not a contaminant and the quantity is so
infinitesimal it's not worth bothering with.

The worst filters are Whatman.  It must be because of the extra chemical
processing to make them low ash and ultra pure.  Anyway, they really cause
yellowing.  My recommendation is NEVER filter.  Decanting is the best
method.

Best regards,

Trem

- Original Message - 
From: SJY youngst...@konnections.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 8:44 PM
Subject: [trem] Re: CSFiltering CS


 Terry,

 Just let the particulates settle to the bottom - you might have to 
 first stir to break surface tension if they are floating on the 
 surface.  Then just carefully decant off the clear liquid and dump out 
 the liquid  solid stuff at the bottom.  Filtering often adds more 
 stuff then it takes out unless you have very good filter media (coffee 
 filters seem to introduce chemicals into your brew - recommend not 
 using them). --Steve Y.

 - Original Message -
 From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 10:48 AM
 Subject: CSFiltering CS


  I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS 
  generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my 
  own CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the 
  setting (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the 
  otherwise clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
 
  Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of 
  filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
 
  Thanks,
  Terry
 
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CSFiltering CS

2004-07-19 Thread Trem
Hi Terry,

Exactly.  It's silver and distilled water in the vessel.  I wouldn't have any 
qualms
about ingesting a small quantity of silver oxide or silver ?.  I wouldn't drink 
the
dregs for long periods of time but an occasional particle is not a worry to me.
Decanting always leaves any dregs behind.  Floaters are definitely a small 
amount.
Just looks like more since they are so thin.

I see them in almost every batch I make with the SG7 and when I drain the CS 
into
another container through the spigot they're never seen again in the storage 
bottles.

Trem

- Original Message - 
From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 10:04 AM
Subject: [trem] RE: CSFiltering CS


 Trem:

 Thanks for the information.  The particles I see are not floaters, but are
 at (or near) the bottom.  Therefore decanting should work.  I gather though,
 that even if a few of the particles are in my decanted fluid, they're not
 harmful?

 Terry

 -Original Message-
 From: Trem [mailto:t...@silvergen.com]
 Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 7:31 AM
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Subject: CSFiltering CS


 Hi Steve,

 You're correct about the surface particles.  They are probably only one atom
 thick and are floating because of surface tension.  When I see them I'm
 reminded of an oil sheen.  One drop of oil can cover a large surface and
 make one think it's more than it really is.

 I have found that if one just pours off (decants) into another container the
 surface floaters just disappear.  Anyway there's nothing to worry about
 since it's all silver and not a contaminant and the quantity is so
 infinitesimal it's not worth bothering with.

 The worst filters are Whatman.  It must be because of the extra chemical
 processing to make them low ash and ultra pure.  Anyway, they really cause
 yellowing.  My recommendation is NEVER filter.  Decanting is the best
 method.

 Best regards,

 Trem

 - Original Message - 
 From: SJY youngst...@konnections.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 8:44 PM
 Subject: [trem] Re: CSFiltering CS


  Terry,
 
  Just let the particulates settle to the bottom - you might have to
  first stir to break surface tension if they are floating on the
  surface.  Then just carefully decant off the clear liquid and dump out
  the liquid  solid stuff at the bottom.  Filtering often adds more
  stuff then it takes out unless you have very good filter media (coffee
  filters seem to introduce chemicals into your brew - recommend not
  using them). --Steve Y.
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 10:48 AM
  Subject: CSFiltering CS
 
 
   I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS
   generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my
   own CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the
   setting (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the
   otherwise clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
  
   Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of
   filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
  
   Thanks,
   Terry
  
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CSFiltering CS

2004-07-18 Thread Terry
I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS
generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own CS
(Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting (roughly 5
ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise clear liquid
(sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).

Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of
filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?

Thanks,
Terry

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Re: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-18 Thread Garnet
Check your set up and procedure. I never get these under the 1 o'clock
setting when I am careful about contamination. Don't touch the
electrodes with your bare hands. Be careful about what you spray or use
as cleaning products in the same room. Rinse the container three times
with distilled water after cleaning.

I use the same glass jar without cleaning for many batches with no
floaties or particles. I wipe the electrode with Kleenex between
batches. I make two quarts at a time in a canning jar.

Only when I have gone past the 1 o'clock position on the dial have I had
any floaters or sinkers in the solution. But yes you should filter them
out with a coffee filter, or let them settle and pour off the liquid
without distrubing the sediment.

Trem may also have some suggestions. I made quite a few batches like
that initially. Just had to learn good procedures as I keep my generator
on the kitchen counter -- mainly to not use ANY cleaning product near
it, and to always rinse a jar 3 times with distilled water after
cleaning or using even well water to rinse.

Garnet

On Sun, 2004-07-18 at 11:48, Terry wrote:
 I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS
 generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own
 CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting
 (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise
 clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
 
 Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of
 filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
 
 Thanks,
 Terry
 
 ---
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
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RE: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-18 Thread Terry
Ironically my procedure is almost exactly the same as yours (including using
the same glass jar w/out cleaning for many batches), except that I have only
been rinsing twice w/distilled water.  I don't get floaties every time below
1 o'clock, but when I do it's probably because of that (and/or inadvertently
touching an electrode without realizing it).  I am careful about what
cleaning products I use in the area (since mine's on the kitchen counter,
too).

Thanks much for the information.

Terry

-Original Message-
From: Garnet [mailto:garnetri...@earthlink.net] 
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 4:11 PM
To: Silver List
Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS


Check your set up and procedure. I never get these under the 1 o'clock
setting when I am careful about contamination. Don't touch the electrodes
with your bare hands. Be careful about what you spray or use as cleaning
products in the same room. Rinse the container three times with distilled
water after cleaning.

I use the same glass jar without cleaning for many batches with no floaties
or particles. I wipe the electrode with Kleenex between batches. I make two
quarts at a time in a canning jar.

Only when I have gone past the 1 o'clock position on the dial have I had any
floaters or sinkers in the solution. But yes you should filter them out with
a coffee filter, or let them settle and pour off the liquid without
distrubing the sediment.

Trem may also have some suggestions. I made quite a few batches like that
initially. Just had to learn good procedures as I keep my generator on the
kitchen counter -- mainly to not use ANY cleaning product near it, and to
always rinse a jar 3 times with distilled water after cleaning or using even
well water to rinse.

Garnet

On Sun, 2004-07-18 at 11:48, Terry wrote:
 I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS 
 generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own 
 CS (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting 
 (roughly 5 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise 
 clear liquid (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).
 
 Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of 
 filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?
 
 Thanks,
 Terry
 
 ---
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
 Version: 6.0.721 / Virus Database: 477 - Release Date: 7/16/2004
  
 


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Re: CSFiltering CS

2004-07-18 Thread SJY
Terry,

Just let the particulates settle to the bottom - you might have to first
stir to break surface tension if they are floating on the surface.  Then
just carefully decant off the clear liquid and dump out the liquid  solid
stuff at the bottom.  Filtering often adds more stuff then it takes out
unless you have very good filter media (coffee filters seem to introduce
chemicals into your brew - recommend not using them).
--Steve Y.

- Original Message -
From: Terry slickpic...@cox.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 10:48 AM
Subject: CSFiltering CS


 I would like to clarify an issue I read about here before I got a CS
 generator, but can't recall the consensus.  Now that I'm making my own CS
 (Silvergen SG6), if I get above about halfway on the setting (roughly 5
 ppm), I get gray particulates floating in the otherwise clear liquid
 (sometimes I even get a few at 5 ppm).

 Should I filter these out (via a coffee filter or some other type of
 filter), or is it okay to leave these in the CS and consume them?

 Thanks,
 Terry

 ---
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
 Version: 6.0.721 / Virus Database: 477 - Release Date: 7/16/2004





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Re: CSFiltering CS

2002-01-10 Thread Wyatt Hawkins
please unsubscribeyour service from   your list,  
 wyatt hawkins   w4...@juno.com

On Wed, 9 Jan 2002 07:53:44 -0700 Marshalee Hallett
liah...@utah-inter.net writes:
 Some folks think the silver oxide particles that form are a problem 
 in some
 way. Well, I`ve never filtered my CS, and in 6 years, no problems.
 I don`t heat, or stir, the water either, I`m too lazy...It still 
 works!
 Marshalee
 
  I've noticed that several people talk about filtering the 
 completed CS
  after the brewing is completed.  What is it that we need to 
 filter out?
  What is it that settles to the bottom?
 
  Thanks,
 
  Roger Ragain
  Cahokia, Illinois
  United States of America
  E-mail:   rrag...@juno.com
 
 
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 silver.
 
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Re: CSFiltering CS

2002-01-09 Thread Marshalee Hallett
Some folks think the silver oxide particles that form are a problem in some
way. Well, I`ve never filtered my CS, and in 6 years, no problems.
I don`t heat, or stir, the water either, I`m too lazy...It still works!
Marshalee

 I've noticed that several people talk about filtering the completed CS
 after the brewing is completed.  What is it that we need to filter out?
 What is it that settles to the bottom?

 Thanks,

 Roger Ragain
 Cahokia, Illinois
 United States of America
 E-mail:   rrag...@juno.com


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Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-31 Thread nan

  Hi,
  i have a rust color build-up on the glass is use to make cs, if i do not
wash it between batches.

  i made about 11/2 gal. in the last two days, one glass at a time.

  At the end of each day i easily cleaned the glass with dish detergent and
warm soapy water.

  i too, want to know more about this substance.

  Thank you,

  nan



 Carol wrote:
  I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use.
After I
  have finished brewing my CS I strain it using a coffee filter. The
container
  I pour it into has a chip in the glass (this is the measuring cup) and
I
  have noticed a rust coloration forming in the uneven surface of the
chip.
  I am also getting this rust coloration on an eye dropper I use to
snort
  CS with when I get a sinus infection.

  This is the same rust color that my used coffee filter/strainer gets
if I
  leave laying out for a day or so.

  I don't know what is causing this but it has something to do with the
CS.

  -Original Message-
  From: Josephine [mailto:joseph...@poidogs.com]
  Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 11:08 AM
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS

  Talking about filtering CS,
  I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
  When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
  This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as
I
  then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe
colored
  brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the
CS.
  It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I
could
  use
  white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
  So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever
I
  rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored
stain
  develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
  Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
  manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the
silver
  strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of
testing the
  electrodes for purity?
  Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal
covers
  that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and
store
  the CS.
  Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
  Thanks,
  Josephine

  .

   Terry replies:
   Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
   out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
   CS is dark brown). .
  
  
   __
   Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca
  
  
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Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-31 Thread Connie
Yours could be the fact that you wash your glass.
Do not use detergents to clean the containerjust rinse with DW.
I do not even do that!! Occassionally I will wipe out with a clean paper
towel.
Just keep reusing.
Remeber you are making CS.nothing grows in the presence of silverwhy
worry about cleaning the making container?


From: nan n...@wingnet.net
Reply-To: nan n...@wingnet.net
Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2001 12:31:27 -0500
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS
Resent-From: silver-list@eskimo.com
Resent-Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2001 09:37:56 -0800


 
Hi,  
i have a rust color build-up on the glass is use to make cs, if i do not
wash it between batches.
 
i made about 11/2 gal. in the last two days, one glass at a time.
 
At the end of each day i easily cleaned the glass with dish detergent and
warm soapy water.  
 
i too, want to know more about this substance.

Thank you,
 
nan


 
 Carol wrote: 
I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use. After I
have finished brewing my CS I strain it using a coffee filter. The container
I pour it into has a chip in the glass (this is the measuring cup) and I
have noticed a rust coloration forming in the uneven surface of the chip.

I am also getting this rust coloration on an eye dropper I use to snort
CS with when I get a sinus infection.

This is the same rust color that my used coffee filter/strainer gets if I
leave laying out for a day or so.

I don't know what is causing this but it has something to do with the CS.

-Original Message-
From: Josephine [mailto:joseph...@poidogs.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 11:08 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS

Talking about filtering CS,
I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as I
then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe colored
brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the CS.
It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I could
use 
white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever I
rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored stain
develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the silver
strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of testing the
electrodes for purity?
Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal covers
that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and store
the CS. 
Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
Thanks, 
Josephine 

. 

 Terry replies: 
 Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
 out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
 CS is dark brown). .
 
 
 __
 Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca
 
 
 -- 
 The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
 
 To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
 silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
 with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.
 
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 Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com
 






RE: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-30 Thread Kent and Carol
I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use. After I
have finished brewing my CS I strain it using a coffee filter. The container
I pour it into has a chip in the glass (this is the measuring cup) and I
have noticed a rust coloration forming in the uneven surface of the chip.

I am also getting this rust coloration on an eye dropper I use to snort
CS with when I get a sinus infection.

This is the same rust color that my used coffee filter/strainer gets if I
leave laying out for a day or so.

I don't know what is causing this but it has something to do with the CS.



-Original Message-
From: Josephine [mailto:joseph...@poidogs.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 11:08 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS


Talking about filtering CS,
I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as I
then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe colored
brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the CS.
It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I could
use
white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever I
rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored stain
develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the silver
strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of testing the
electrodes for purity?
Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal covers
that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and store
the CS.
Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
Thanks,
Josephine

.

 Terry replies:
 Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
 out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
 CS is dark brown). .


 __
 Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca


 --
 The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

 To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
 silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
 with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com







Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-30 Thread Josephine
maybe the rust colored material is really rust and maybe the silver rods are
part silver and part iron?
Josephine

So what is the
 rust coloured material. Is the process going too fast? Thanks for your
help.
 This list is wonderful.
 Leo
   

 Kent and Carol wrote:

  I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use.


--
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List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com


Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-30 Thread Leo Regehr
When I use 4-9v batteries with rods 1-1/2 apart, I immediately get rust
coloured cloudy material coming off the negative wire and rising to the surface.
When I go to 3 batteries, it stops, and I see no cloud at all, not even a milky
white. I use distilled water with a starter batch of CS in it. So what is the
rust coloured material. Is the process going too fast? Thanks for your help.
This list is wonderful.
Leo
  

Kent and Carol wrote:

 I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use. After I
 have finished brewing my CS I strain it using a coffee filter. The container
 I pour it into has a chip in the glass (this is the measuring cup) and I
 have noticed a rust coloration forming in the uneven surface of the chip.

 I am also getting this rust coloration on an eye dropper I use to snort
 CS with when I get a sinus infection.

 This is the same rust color that my used coffee filter/strainer gets if I
 leave laying out for a day or so.

 I don't know what is causing this but it has something to do with the CS.

 -Original Message-
 From: Josephine [mailto:joseph...@poidogs.com]
 Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 11:08 AM
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS

 Talking about filtering CS,
 I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
 When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
 This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as I
 then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe colored
 brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the CS.
 It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I could
 use
 white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
 So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever I
 rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored stain
 develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
 Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
 manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the silver
 strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of testing the
 electrodes for purity?
 Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal covers
 that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and store
 the CS.
 Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
 Thanks,
 Josephine

 .

  Terry replies:
  Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
  out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
  CS is dark brown). .
 
 
  __
  Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca
 
 
  --
  The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
 
  To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
  silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
  with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.
 
  To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
  List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com
 
 


Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-30 Thread Leo Regehr
You can buy small containers at drug stores that produce a fine mist by pushing
down on the top. I would try that for snorting.
Leo
  

Kent and Carol wrote:

 I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use. After I
 have finished brewing my CS I strain it using a coffee filter. The container
 I pour it into has a chip in the glass (this is the measuring cup) and I
 have noticed a rust coloration forming in the uneven surface of the chip.

 I am also getting this rust coloration on an eye dropper I use to snort
 CS with when I get a sinus infection.

 This is the same rust color that my used coffee filter/strainer gets if I
 leave laying out for a day or so.

 I don't know what is causing this but it has something to do with the CS.

 -Original Message-
 From: Josephine [mailto:joseph...@poidogs.com]
 Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 11:08 AM
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: CSFiltering CS

 Talking about filtering CS,
 I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
 When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
 This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as I
 then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe colored
 brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the CS.
 It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I could
 use
 white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
 So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever I
 rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored stain
 develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
 Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
 manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the silver
 strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of testing the
 electrodes for purity?
 Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal covers
 that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and store
 the CS.
 Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
 Thanks,
 Josephine

 .

  Terry replies:
  Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
  out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
  CS is dark brown). .
 
 
  __
  Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca
 
 
  --
  The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
 
  To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
  silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
  with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.
 
  To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
  List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com
 
 


Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-30 Thread Leo Regehr
Nope, those rods are good stuff.
Leo

Josephine wrote:

 maybe the rust colored material is really rust and maybe the silver rods are
 part silver and part iron?
 Josephine

 So what is the
  rust coloured material. Is the process going too fast? Thanks for your
 help.
  This list is wonderful.
  Leo

 
  Kent and Carol wrote:
 
   I get the same rust colored stains on a measuring cup that I use.

 --
 The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

 To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
 silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
 with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com


CSFiltering CS

2001-12-29 Thread Terry Chamberlin
Leo asked:
If you strain your stuff with coffee filters, does
that mean you are straining out excessive CS out of
your solution?

Terry replies:
Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
CS is dark brown). I sell a water filter that will
filter out anything down to .193 microns, which
includes all bacteria and probably all viruses. Silver
particles even in low-voltage, yellow CS will be .05
microns and smaller, about 1/40th the size that my
water filter will catch, about 1/1000th the size that
a coffee filter will catch. 


__ 
Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca


--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com


Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-29 Thread Josephine
Talking about filtering CS,
I bought the unbleached coffee filters, the Melitta brand.
When I used them to filter my CS, the CS got darker yellow in color.
This happened several times so I stopped using those coffee filters as I
then figured that the filters are not really unbleached but maybe colored
brown to look unbleached and perhaps the coloring is leaching into the CS.
It was then suggested by the manufacturer of my CS generator that I could
use
white cotton handkerchiefs to filter the CS.
So now I am using cotton hankies. However, I am noticing that whenever I
rinse out the hankies and hang them to dry, I notice a rust colored stain
develops on the part that was in contact with the CS.
Now I am wondering where this rust color is originating from. The
manufacturer  has no explanation for the rust color and says that the silver
strips being used for the electrodes are 99.9 silver. Any way of testing the
electrodes for purity?
Also, I am beginning to wonder if the rust is coming from the metal covers
that I am using for the quart size mason jars that I use to make and store
the CS.
Any ideas or comments on this subject is appreciated.
Thanks,
Josephine

.

 Terry replies:
 Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
 out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
 CS is dark brown). .


 __
 Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca


 --
 The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

 To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
 silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
 with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com




Re: CSFiltering CS

2001-12-29 Thread Leo Regehr
So what are the coffeee filters to strain out?
Leo

Terry Chamberlin wrote:

 Leo asked:
 If you strain your stuff with coffee filters, does
 that mean you are straining out excessive CS out of
 your solution?

 Terry replies:
 Leo, no filter that I have ever heard of can filter
 out particles of anything as small as CS (unless your
 CS is dark brown). I sell a water filter that will
 filter out anything down to .193 microns, which
 includes all bacteria and probably all viruses. Silver
 particles even in low-voltage, yellow CS will be .05
 microns and smaller, about 1/40th the size that my
 water filter will catch, about 1/1000th the size that
 a coffee filter will catch.

 __
 Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca

 --
 The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

 To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
 silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
 with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com