Greetings all,

I have a friend with multiple-sclerosis(sp?) that isn't getting better
:-(.  I tried to talk her into the CS thing a while back without luck. 
Recently she has indicated a willingness to try it.

If there is anyone on this list that has MS and had any effects good or
bad? I would appreciate knowing.  Thanks in advance.

I spent the night combing the net and found an email thread that
referenced me to this list.

I am pretty handy with a soldering iron (and microcontrollers) and was
lucky enough to find some directions for building a simple generator
tonight.  I looked this up a few years ago and the information seems to
have gotten slim but there are a wealth of people selling these now. 
Appreciated finding the plans since nether she nor I are rolling in the
$$$ (I'm not working at the moment).

Along with the plans, I also found instructions on calibrating the PPM
value based on time and some visual cues and can hopefully adjust based
on that to start with.  Since my friend does have MS
(secondary-progressive) I want to start out around 5-8 PPM so the
initial "kill-off" of "bugs" of various forms does not overwhelm her.

I figure that I can work up some kind of timer (mechanical or
microcontroller) once I get some idea of what PPM value I am getting in
the interest of consistancy (I assume that is important).  I have also
considered something like a fish tank heater to be able to work at a
known temperature, but again, I am not sure just how critical all this
is.

What information I did find seems to favor the 27 volt approach.  I've
also seen reports of people using 6KV to do it.  Is there some advantage
to the higer voltage other than perhaps a smaller particulate size? 
Does it actually matter?  A 27V power supply or batteries is a lot
cheaper than a 6KV power supply (and I think safer around someone with
severe coordination problems).

Any comments or suggestions are very much appreciated.

Thanks & take care, Vikki. 
--
Victoria Welch, WV9K, DoD#-13, Net/Sys/WebAdmin SeaStar.org,
vikki.oz.net
"Walking on water and developing software to specification are
easy as long as both are frozen" - Edward V. Berard.
Do not unto others, that which you would not have others do unto you.


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