Hi Dee,

Several others have done the same, but since I wrote it up anyway, 
here's my explanation...

If you take 10 parts distilled water to 1 part of your 35% H2O2 you'll 
get .35 parts of (pure) H2O2 in 11 parts of liquid or .35/11=.031 or 
3.1%, which is certainly close enough!

The "parts" can be any unit you want that will yield a useful amount.

Examples: 

1 drop to 10 drops, you'll end up with 11 drops of 3% H2O2
1 spoonful to 10 spoonfuls, you'll end up with 11 spoonfuls (any size 
spoonful you want!)
1 liter to 10 liters, you'll have 11 liters of 3% when you're done...

So, how big of a bottle do you want to store your 3% in? If you make a 
bit less, no problem; a bit more, just toss the leftovers.

Does that simplify the issue a little bit?

Mike D.

> Yes I think I have realised this now Tel, but it is dealing with the one
> I have which is the problem.  I am trying to ascertain how to dilute it
> into the 3% sort and gradually get rid of it.  dee
> 
> On 14 Apr 2010, at 14:07, Tel Tofflemire wrote:
> 
> > 36% H2o2 is too strong for most people to deal with. Even the fumes
> > can harm you. You should stick with 3% it is much safer to use. Plus a
> > lot cheaper.
> >  
> > Tel Tofflemire
> > Dewey, AZ.
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
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[Mike Devour, Citizen, Patriot, Libertarian]
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[Speaking only for myself...               ]