Using the meter won't hurt anything, just be aware that when conditions are different, you need to alter the "Eddicated Guesswork" some. That also applies to using Auto Off circuity that uses conductivity [like a meter does].. there may be more silver there than normal and not show up and take quite a bit longer to build up Ionic conductivity as more of it is crystallizing at a lower saturation point, if it's cold ....and cold water itself is considerably less conductive than warm, further adding to the time it takes to add Ionic conductivity on top of the lowered water conductivity.

Just the other day I discovered how much difference there can be, when I ran 2 batches in my cold house using water that was the same temperature and they took about 5 times as long as when run in the summer using similar water. [I don't do a lot of "heating and cooling" ] But all the factors don't add up to 5 times as much *silver* in the water..."maybe" 5% more? [as a wild guess]

Ode


At 06:55 PM 1/23/2010 +0000, you wrote:
Thanks Ode. Do you think it will do any good to run the meter on, or is this unnecessary? dee

On 23 Jan 2010, at 15:56, Ode Coyote wrote:

>
>
> Ions are in solution and are all that registers on a meter.
> Cold water has a lower saturation point to maintain a solution..ions go colloidal and don't register on a meter. > If those colloidal "particles" are still very very small, even a laser won't show them as TE.
> The silver is still there.
>
> PPM meters don't measure PPM...and all you have is a good guess under certain conditions based on conductivity
> Temperature is one of those conditions.
>
> Ode
>
>
>


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