Thanks Ode!

I just responded to the other thread, mentioning that I couldn't find the
"in the sun stirring method", and it was because I had not gotten to it yet
in my mailbox.

Aldi

On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 1:12 PM, Ode Coyote <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
>  A black surface soaking up the suns rays will heat that area in the water
> more than all the other areas.
>  Warm rises, relatively cooler sinks [Temperature differential ] and the
> water circulates. ["Thermal Stirring"]
>
>  Stirring does reduce deposits, especially where an un-interrupted ion
> track might intersect the container, but may not eliminate them as the
> majority of crud [but not all of it ] comes from water contamination being
> "used up" by highly reactive ions forming nonconductive particulates...in
> effect, further purifying the water as that insoluble crud falls out, as
> added ions that don't find a reaction partner make it more conductive with
> soluble ionic *silver*.
>
> So
> The crud is a "good thing"...to leave on the bottom...as the top becomes
> more refined by its dropping out.
> The *generator* always does the same very simple thing in a massively
> variable and extremely reactive environment.
>
>  A low frequency alternating current output to the electrodes eliminates DC
> ion tracking thus reducing the need to stir and those direction shifting
> traveling ions have mass and velocity, thus will move the water some,
> molecule by molecule by impact, but mostly only directly between the
> electrodes.
>
> If the container is mostly filled with electrode, that's generally enough
> stirring.
>
> ode
>