Well, you can't change the laws of nature, and they are fairly simple on this. Anyone can make good electrically isolated silver water at home with minimal equipment, if it is the right kind. After all, it is only silver and water- if both are pure to start with, you won't end up with much else. And when you use low voltage and control the current with a simple potentiometer (75 cents) or a resistor of the correct size, you also get ions without much in the way of particles being generated.

Anyone can do it.

Simple.

Attention to a few details is important- such as very pure water to start- that is essential; and 99.9% pure silver. Cleaning the jars very well and rinsing them very well before starting is also important- cleanliness and proper handling (or I should say, NOT handling) of the silver, jars, and water is very important; think sterile procedures. Clean hands, clean fairly dust free work area, pure water, pure silver, attention to detail, that's about it. You can get as good an outcome as a laboratory, if one follows correct procedures. After all we are only following nature's laws here- we did not make them up, and it is not magic.

Kathryn

On Sep 7, 2009, at 5:52 AM, John E. Stevens wrote:

I don't think the outcome is anywhere near equal...

On Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 5:24 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:
In a message dated 9/6/2009 9:15:01 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes:
$159.00 is not expensive...
Maybe not to you ---to many of us--way expensive Esp when it can be done in a much less expensive manner with equal outcome... I'm glad you can afford it. Wish I could easily..Maybe some day my "ship will come in" :-) Lois