My experience with gold is that an alloy (my testing was with a 1:1: molar ratio) will cause the atoms to leave the anode at a voltage consistent with the one that requires lower voltage. My take is that as the atoms around the other metal (copper in this case, but gold in my testing) leave, so the other atoms end up alone and drift off However I suspect that if the copper were of a higher percentage than the silver, this would likely not be the case.

Marshall

Dan Nave wrote:
On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 4:18 AM, Ode Coyote <[email protected]> wrote:

"It could even be that 90% silver circulation coin will work in a
pinch, being 10% copper which also kills germs and works even better
on fungi."

I was under the impression that you need to be over a certain voltage
to get the copper to go into the water.  Could you not just keep the
brewing voltage below that level and get mostly silver out of the
coin?

Dan


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