Sharon,

I tried the milk trick too.  I put one cup of milk in
a coffee cup and put 2 tablespoonfuls of colloidal
silver in it.  I left the cup on the counter uncovered.

The milk kept for about one day.  Somewhere
around the second day it had some film on the
top of it.  The third day it was totally curdled.

I didn't use a control cup of milk because all
I was trying to do was to see if a large amount
of collodal silver could stop milk from spoiling
altogether.  And it didn't.  Or at least it didn't
stop it from curdling.

I use a Qwik Silver colloidal silver generator.
You can't get these right now, though.

My generator uses one 9 volt battery and works
OK with a rechargeable battery.  I measured
30 volts from the electrodes.  So my generator
has some kind of voltage regulator in it.

>From all appearances the colloidal silver
is turning out the way it should be.  I can see
the golden mist in the water after about 20 minutes.
My generator shuts off after between 25-30 minutes.

My instructions say to stir the colloidal silver when
it is done.  When you do this, any residue falls
to the bottom of the glass that the colloidal silver
is in.  Later , you pour your solution out
carefully and the residue should stay in the bottle.
You can then rinse the bottle.


> Okay listers,
>
> You know the silver I made the other day for the first time? Well, I did a
> little experiment day before yesterday. I was just dying to know what it
> was I had ended up with. So I dug out 3 identical plastic food storage
> containers from the cupboard, made sure they were spotlessly clean,
> measured and filled each of them with cold milk from the same container.
> Capped the first one and wrote "control" on it. Added one teaspoon of CS
> from the HomeCure people that I had bought for $49 a quart, capped and
> labeled it. Added one teaspoon of my homemade CS, capped and labeled that.
>
> Set them on the kitchen countertop and let them start rotting. Didn't see
> anything all day yesterday but when I got up this morning the control milk
> had completely solidified. The HomeCure CS milk was still a liquid. My
> homemade CS milk was (sniff sniff) halfways in between. I would actually
> say a little more on the solidified side but not totally.
>
> Am I ever disappointed. I've made 2 batches of this stuff so far. The
first
> time it went about an hour and 20 minutes. The second time it went for an
> hour and 5 minutes after seeding it with some from the first batch. The
> only difference I noticed between the batches was that the seeded batch
> formed feathers on the one electrode a little quicker (but not much) than
> the first batch did.
>
> If you all remember, I am using the simple setup of 3 9-volt batteries, 2
> cups of water and the silver wires immersed 3 and a half inches. I
filtered
> both batches through a paper towel as no matter how careful I was in
> removing the feathered electrode, some tiny dots of black remained
floating
> in the water and didn't settle out. Should I not have filtered it?
>
> So what do I do now?? Let it run longer? Quit filtering it? Buy a
> generator? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Sharon
>
>
>
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