Well, I wouldn't say that I'm a math whiz. But maybe I can help. So, if you have an ounce of mms at 28% concentration, that ounce contains .28 ounce of sodium chlorite. So the question is, how may ounces of total liquid would you have to have so that .28 ounce of sodium chlorite is only 3% of the total? So another way of say it is this:

  .28/x = .03

Solving for x,

  x = .28/.03 = 9.33333333...

So, since the total volume needs to be 9 and 1/3 ounces, and you started out with an ounce of mms, add 8 and 1/3 ounces of water to get 3% sodium chlorite. How does that sound? Of course, you could use any unit of measurement that you want. The numbers should still relate. Maybe a real math whiz can check my logic. :-)

Steve


On 9/13/2010 5:29 PM, Lisa wrote:
Ooh…I have a supply of MMS and would actually LOVE to know how to make
my own oxygen drops. Any math whizzes out there to help?

Lisa

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*From:* Renee [mailto:[email protected]]
*Sent:* Monday, September 13, 2010 2:27 PM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: CS>Tumor reduction

Pretty much. Only MMS is full strength at 28% while stabilized (or
activated) oxygen is between 2 and 3% of sodium chlorite. So no need to
activate it externally with acid. It activates with your stomach acid.
It does need to be diluted in water though, even at that strength. So a
person with a bottle of MMS can dilute this down to 2 to 3% to get
stabilized oxygen. Just please don't ask me how to do this--I'm math
challenged.

Samala,

Renee

/-------Original Message-------/

What is in the "oxygen drops?" Is that the same as MMS (sodium chlorite)?

        



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