>From: "M. G. Devour" <[email protected]>
>I think we should devise two or three standard designs and recipes
>that cover all the basics, build or buy the equipment, run them, test
>the results and publish them in a FAQ and on the web. 

This is a good idea.

>Every design and recipe should clearly specify *all* of the details
>that affect the results.

This is a *really* good idea. Unfortunately most people (that make
designs available) aren't very good documentators. (I'm speaking from
the experience of trying to reproduce some of these people's designs
for other alternative health devices.)

For example, I have plans/instructions for a colloidal silver generator,
that were sent to me, up on my web-site. A number of details are missing:
size/shape of the silver electrodes, resulting PPM, etc.

>And we should keep at least one of them simple enough for people to use
>"just to give it a try" with absolute minimum cost and complexity

What could be simpler/cheaper than three or four 9 volt batteries, connected
in series, with an LED (to let you know that voltage is flowing) and two
silver electrodes? (Someone who is actually making colloidal silver at
this point should fill in the rest of the details, such as you can buy
a package of 9 volt battery connectors from Radio Shack, and you can buy
a package of alligator clips from them as well (for those people who don't
like soldering), and an LED as well, etc.etc.etc.)

        fred