Hello Renee,

I am actually making a solution of acidified sodium chlorite.  When you 
activate MMS you also are making a solution of acidified sodium chlorite.

I don't consider 300 PPM "very dilute."  1 PPM is "very dilute."  In water 
purification we use a "strong" concentration of 4 PPM.  The MMS protocol is 
"supercalifragilisticexpilidocious" strong... :) 

Yes.  If you mix the solution according to the directions I provided earlier, 
and store it out of UV light, it will still be viable after 4 weeks.  Keep in 
mind that these products have been used in industry since the mid 1980's.  Jim 
Humble is a newcomber to this whole technology.  Mix some up and try it.  You 
don't have to take my word for it, you can demonstrate it to yourself.

A 2% sodium chlorite solution has been used in hospitals for hard surface 
sanitation.  In hospital use, the label calls for replacing the solution after 
2 weeks.  I seem to remember it being a 100 PPM solution, but I would have to 
check on that.  Other sanatizing solutions involve chlorine dioxide in water 
solutions.  They have a commericial viable shelf life of 1 week.

I believe the definition of a sanitizer is something that completely eliminates 
all of the pathogens in 30 seconds of contact.

Chlorine dioxide is a very powerful oxidizer.

Tom


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Renee 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, February 14, 2010 4:02 PM
Subject: Re: CS>ear infection


      Tom, I guess I'm still not getting this.  You are in essence making a 
very dilute form of AMMS (activated mms), right?  At 300ppm of chlorine dioxide?

      Yet you are saying that this mix, that the chlorine dioxide will still be 
viable after x number of days?  Instead of the few hours that Jim Humble states 
the chlorine dioxide is viable in a regular AMMS solution?

      Thanks,
      Renee