Hi Kathryn, since your talking about D.C. current. As current passes from pole 
to pole. It passes the minerals too. Just wipe off eccess and switch polarity 
each time. Keeping current to less than 1 amp decreases particulant size. 
Voltage really doesn't matter. My Silver Puppy uses SWAP mode to achieve A.C. 
which does the same thing automaticly. Hope this helps. Just remember ohms law. 
Larry


--- On Sun, 10/18/09, Clayton Family <clay...@skypoint.com> wrote:


From: Clayton Family <clay...@skypoint.com>
Subject: Re: CS>Getting Started
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Sunday, October 18, 2009, 12:45 PM


Sort of- it looks like your current may be on the high side, otherwise it would 
not be so much. It is normal- the water electrolyzes, the silver picks it up 
and it turns to the gunk you see. To control the amount of gunk, you can 
control the current  more. That you can do with a resistor, diode or 
potentiometer in series.


If you clip your wires to a multimeter set to measure milliamps, it should read 
zero when you start- that means there is no current flowing through the water 
to speak of. As the silver ions continue to  go into the water, the 
conductivity increases and the current flow increases along with that. I forget 
what the details are (read formula is), but less than 1 mA current is a good 
idea if your silver surface area is under a certain - yours looks close to 
mine, and 1mA is what I am using. Just looking to see what the current is gives 
you some clues.


I got a 75 ohm potentiometer at the surplus store  and put it in series to keep 
a lid on the current. Maybe it was a dollar.


Kathryn




On Oct 18, 2009, at 1:38 PM, Jeff Maahs wrote:




I'm getting a buildup of gunk on one of the rods. I haven't seen this on any of 
the videos or pictures. Is this normal?

Here's an image if it helps: http://tinyurl.com/yfdskwb

Thank you,
Jeff