Go to your local scrap yard and get a piece. It will probably be a 90-6-4 alloy
which wont oxidize and is essentially inert. Worth about $3 lb. as scrap.
“The only difference between death and taxes is that death doesn’t get worse
every time Congress meets.”
-Will Rogers
> On Jun 17,
Palladium is second best to Platinum and costs half as much. Titanium is
cheaper than either and is corrosion resistant, but in nature is found as
Titanium Oxide..it does "rust" eventually, but Titanium Oxide is very inert
[as is Aluminum Oxide]
If your water ionizer uses tap water or there is a
Nenah,
The electrodes I use in my DIY water ionizer, and in good commercial
ionizers, are titanium coated with Platinum (not Palladium). You can find
them on Amazon, for example, by searching for Platinized Titanium Anodes.
They are expensive but necessary to be non-reactive in the
On 06/16/2016 02:52 PM, John Popelish wrote:
>
> Do you know of any reference describing this effect?
Not handy, it's a memory from long ago when I used carbon electrodes at
a company.
--
Jerry Durand, Durand Interstellar, Inc. http://interstellar.com
tel: +1 408 356-3886, USA toll free: 1 866
On 06/16/2016 05:04 PM, Jerry Durand wrote:
Carbon electrodes in oxygenated water can give off carbon monoxide. In
most cases, you wouldn't make enough to be of any concern but if someone
is extra sensitive to CO, then it could be a problem.
Do you know of any reference describing this effect?
Carbon electrodes in oxygenated water can give off carbon monoxide. In
most cases, you wouldn't make enough to be of any concern but if someone
is extra sensitive to CO, then it could be a problem.
On 06/16/2016 01:56 PM, John Popelish wrote:
> I would probably try carbon electrodes. They are
On 06/16/2016 03:13 PM, Nenah Sylver wrote:
(snip)
My question concerns the material comprising the electrodes.
Obviously, stainless steel is not a good material for water
ionizer electrodes, because we don’t want heavy metal to
contaminate the water. The best homemade ionizers (and I’m
assuming
We run all our CS water through one of our water structuring devices,
just for the triple kick (CS, ionized, structured).
In other news, I was just buying some silver wire for our business
(nothing to do with CS) and see they have a note now that their silver
wire isn't certified for human uses
Hi Nenah, just a quickie 'til I do some research; although titanium is a
good-un in the human body for all sorts of things, I'm unsure of the
possible effects of a titanium ion in the digestive tract. But in the
meantime consider Silver; kind of a twofer - CS and ionized water both?
All for
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