At 02:34 PM 7/10/2009 -0700, you wrote:

Tel Tofflemire
Dewey, AZ.

--- On Fri, 7/10/09, Ode Coyote <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Ode Coyote <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CS>Ionic foot baths and foot lore
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, July 10, 2009, 5:28 AM



  So, what is the dead short current limit on them?
Ode

You are protected by a 3 wire GFCI outlet adapter, I think around 3 amps, without looking it up. I know just touching the wires together will shut it off, No shock.

I know it is not as much as the Colloidal Master, it shuts off by either way,
1. reaching your dialed in preset limit of PPM,  1---to--10....
or  2. just touching the electrodes together, breaks the flow of current.


## Shorting the electrodes drops the voltage to near zero so that the current will stay constant.
 Colloid Master, Silvergen and SilverPuppy all work that way.
It's also a standard current overload protection circuit on most good audio amplifiers so you don't blow out the amp if the speaker wires get shorted. In the CS generators, when the voltage goes below somewhere around 6 volts [or whatever the reference is, set by the dial]...to keep that current constant.... a voltage *comparator* circuit turns the machine off. [auto off]
The current control circuit alone, won't turn anything off.

Put an ammeter on the footbath electrodes and get how many milliamps it puts out at dead short. An ammeter in series without a resistive load also in series, is a dead short.

A GFCI is a last resort fail safe to prevent death should controls malfunction.


Ode




 Did you get that Ode?
Tel


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