That sounds fine.  That's what I do as well.  I don't think there is any 
difference between CS and EIS for purposes of this forum.  

EIS is Electrically Isolated Silver, which is a form of CS, with around 10-20% 
colloidal silver particles, and 80-90% ionic silver particles, which I 
understand are AgOH.

CS is what most people call EIS.  In fact the only place I have heard EIS is on 
this forum.  The rest of the world calls it CS.  EIS is more accurate, I 
believe, only because there are other ways to make CS, such as from 
nano-silver-powder, which apparently involves no electricity.  So I suppose 
it's good to distinguish them by using the abbrev EIS.

Dick




________________________________
From: leslie <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 2:13:49 PM
Subject: Re: CS>moon on fingernails? -- how much do you use?

 Re: CS>moon on fingernails? -- how much do you use?  
I buy my distilled water from walmart or grocery 
store; wish I had my own distiller but other things more important right now. I 
do not add salt. I don't know the difference in EIS or CS but all I learned was 
to make CS and I test to 10 ppm. I don't mess with getting it to go faster. 
Leslie
----- Original Message ----- 
>From: Norton, 
>  Steve 
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 12:52 
>  PM
>Subject: Re: CS>moon on fingernails? 
>  -- how much do you use?
>
>
>I you use distilled water with no additives I wouldn't be 
>  concerned.
>
> - Steve N
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: 
>  Leslie <[email protected]>
>To: 
> [email protected] <[email protected]>
>Sent: 
>  Fri Feb 05 12:19:33 2010
>Subject: Re: CS>moon on fingernails? -- how 
>  much do you use?
>
>How do you get contaminated collodial silver salts? 
>  Could I have gotten
>contaminated silver?? Maybe I am doing something wrong 
>  in making it. Perhaps
>I should start all over in learning just how to do 
>  all this.
>