Ode,
on another note, a little brainstorming....

A low salt diet is often recommended for hypertensives.
It's very difficult to truly know how low you're getting because of
nutritional info and portion sizes don't often match.

Was wondering if it would be practical to use TDS urine readings as a
guide to daily salt status.

What do you think?

                                                Chuck
_All life is a conjugation of the verb "to eat"


On 6/16/2007 6:03:00 AM, Ode Coyote ([email protected]) wrote:
> The meters come calibrated and they seem to have done it well.
> Hannas calibration fluid is expensive and sometimes defective. [Which will
> 
> really mess with your head ]
> 
> I'd make up a batch of plain non iodized salt /distilled water, say a
> quart, at some specific meter reading, say 20 uS, at a specific room
> temperature..and keep that.
> Pour some out into a clean sampling glass and check the meter...discard the
> sample.
> 
> When checking, keep both the meter and the water in the same place over night.
> 
> Ode
> 
> 


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