I would degrease with a solvent if possible, rub with paper towels.  Rinse
with water.  Clean with rubbing alcohol and a clean white paper towel.
Rinse with distilled water.  Clean with H2O2 and paper towel.  Rinse with
distilled water several times.  Don't touch it with your fingers during
this process.  Also, be extra diligent with cleaning the edges.

If that does not work see if you can locate an ultrasonic cleaner and work
that into the cleaning process.

Dan




On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 10:47 AM, [email protected] <[email protected]>wrote:

>     Ah.  Well then if you are getting those results there must be, as
> Marshall said, an oil based residue.  Heat or a good oil degreaser should
> do the trick.  Heat will burn it off, the degreaser will wash it off.
>
> I've manipulated silver via many means and never ever put a lubricant on,
> but then I'm more into 'hand work'.  Your jeweler may have done it the
> fastest way, which was probably by a machine that by oiling, made the
> process easier for him.
>
> But none of the lubricant should have embedded itself into the silver, so
> once cleaned you should be good to go.  Please let us know how it turns out.
>
> Samala,
> Renee
>
>
>
>
>  *-------Original Message-------*
>
>
> The reason for suspecting lubricant is that I dont expect anything other
> than silver to be present. Since we know lubrication was involved that's
> the reasoning.
> As for the brewing, I get almost wax type stuff coming off the wire and
> makes the water opaque and dirty
> I am aware of the ion cloud but this is not that , after swapping the
> electrodes for the commercially bought silver electrode everything was as
> expected
> This really irked me since I was very new to brewing cs and assumed it was
> something I was doing wrong!
>
>