M. G. Devour wrote: > > On 10 Feb 98 at 21:59, angelina lee wrote: > > > Hi Mike, > > Interesting report. How do you know the CS was 24ppm ? How did you > > test it ? > > Made according to the same procedure as a batch which I did have > tested. An environmental testing lab in my area. $15 per sample. Did > two samples just to test the "scatter." One was 26, the other 22: > average is 24. <g> > > Mike > > PS: Feel free to ask this kind of question on-list. There certainly > isn't a glut of list-traffic! > > [Mike Devour, Citizen, Patriot, Libertarian] > [[email protected] ] > [Speaking only for myself... ] Hi Mike, Thanks for reply. Could you give details of "same procedure as a batch" so I can correlate that to the 24ppm concentration of silver. If more members will post details of their procedures and results of any tests they had done we could build up a data base. Who knows what we may learn from it. I`m a retired engineer so am used to analysing data. So dump it on me folks, via the list ,in case some one else wants to play with data also. Something I`ve noticed missing from most procedures given is electrical data. Folks please do the following, Get a multimeter and read the voltage at the silver electrodes when starting a batch , read the current to the electrodes during the batch (write down the current reading every 15 min) until the batch is done. Read the electrode voltage again at end of batch. Post this data on the list. (silver-list ) . For example my typical batch is Start Voltage 26 1/2 volts, Current was 3ma (milliamps) after 15min, 4ma after 20min, 5ma after 30min ,Stop voltage 26 1/2 volts. The longer your batch runs the higher the current becomes, this is because more silver atoms are in the water and the conductivity is getting better. If you run for an hour the current could get up to 40ma or more, that would be a very strong solution. My example was for an 8oz batch. Please give your batch size with your data. Most of the time your start and stop voltage will be the same. If its not your batteries have died and need replacing. If you can run the same current profile with every run you will get consistent pmm every batch. You will not know this if you don`t keep current readings. Looking forward to your data members. Bob Lee
don`t cuss the farmer with your mouth full -- oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast [email protected] -- 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: [email protected] -or- [email protected] with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the subject: line. To post, address your message to: [email protected] List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

