> That is not my understanding at all. 

Well, this is the precise reason given by Dr Beck in
his paper. It is supposed to be a way of increasing the
conductivity of the water without adding salt to thee
water. It has nothing to do with 'purifying' the water,
as he recommends doing this with distilled water also.

> Are we talking about heating the water and using hot water,
> or boiling the water to remove dissolved gases then letting
> it cool down before using it?  The first should be a no-no,

Until someone gives (a) specific reason(s) for it being
'a no-no', it is totally irrelevant to even say it.

> and the second one makes a lot of sense, expecially if one is
> getting variable results from different bottles of distilled
> water.
>
> Marshall

Anyone who buys bottles of distilled water is wasting
their money, imho. If you want to buy it, at least get
it from one of the commercial dispensers that monitor
the quality of the water and the equipment making it,
like Culligan Water (formerly Harmony Brook). Distilled
water leaches chemicals out of plastic bottles, and
should never be stored in plastic except for very
short periods of time...which is why I use glass for my
water.

--

Charles Marcus


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