Thanks for this! Very succinct and a definite keeper! L
On Aug 20, 2013, at 8:56 PM, yousouf eydatoula wrote:

> I shall try to answer the question of the use of spring or distilled water. 
> Distilled water has no dissolved minerals. It is just water and nothing else. 
> The conductivity of distilled is very low. Spring water has dissolved 
> minerals, some fluoride but not much (true spring water, not the tap water 
> they bottle and sell to you as spring water.) The conductivity of spring 
> water is high. When the conductivity is high the formation of silver colloids 
> is very fast and the particles are big. Big silver particles are not as 
> effective as small ones. Small particles can go deeper in the body system. 
> This is why when you use tap or spring water you see the immediate formation 
> of the white/grey cloud in the water, whereas when you use distilled the 
> cloud form very slowly and it is not even white or grey. When the silver 
> particles are very small they reflect light in a different way, which is why 
> the thin cloud you see with pure distilled water is of a gold, or light brown 
> color. 
> So don't use spring water. It contains dissolved salts which may react with 
> the silver, and the particles formed are too large. Use distilled water. You 
> can also use reverse osmosis water. This process produces water with almost 
> no dissolved salts. 
> Rain water is like distilled water. But as the rain passes through the air it 
> takes with it dust and smog. And you have to consider whether the surface it 
> falls upon is clean enough. I have used snow (I live in Toronto) but it was 
> not clean. I guess that in the countryside the snow may be cleaner and has 
> less dissolved particles.
> By the way the faster you achieve a high concentration is not a good sign at 
> all for the reasons mentioned above. This means that your water has dissolved 
> minerals and your water conductivity is high. With good distilled water it 
> takes about 20-30 minutes to get good CS. The color will be slightly golden 
> with a bitter aftertaste.
> BTW the fluoride the USA and Canada use to make sick idiots of their people 
> does not come from China, but from your own nuclear industry. Sodium 
> hexafluoride is the same, whether produced in USA or China.
> 
> 
> From: Neville Munn <[email protected]>
> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
> Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 8:22 PM
> Subject: RE: CS>RAIN WATER
> 
> @GWilliams...I have made it using rainwater, many times, of course it will 
> have compounds and organics etc included from whatever comes off the roof 
> into the tank, but one can achieve a high concentration of silver in 3-5 
> minutes brewing.  I would still use rainwater in an emergency if I considered 
> it was warranted to hit something hard and fast initially before reverting 
> back to the properly made EIS for continued treatment.
> 
> @Lena...I have never found any articles stating a rainwater connection with 
> that blue business, it was always attributed to mains water and a host of 
> other stupid reasons.  It should be remembered that not all societies have 
> the advantage of DW or pure water available to them.  Mains water not only 
> contains fluoride, chlorine etc but also contains anti rust additives and a 
> whole host of other stuff.
> 
> There are two forms of fluoride apparently, good and bad, our, and I would 
> assume all other mains water supplies contain the toxic waste by product of 
> Industry fluoride imported from China.  I am led to believe THAT form of 
> fluoride is illegal to dump, but so as avoid the Industry expense and worry 
> of disposal someone came up with the idea to sell it to water authorities.  I 
> believe it's grade 7 on the toxicity list and an illegal substance to just 
> dump in land fill or whatever?
> 
> N.
> 
> Subject: Re: CS>RAIN WATER
> From: [email protected]
> Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 12:13:46 -0400
> To: [email protected]
> 
> The minerals could change the charge in the water too soon, and depending on 
> what's in the water, you simply won't have pure CS, which is what probably 
> made those highly publicized folks turn blue/gray. You really need to use 
> distilled water. I once forgot that my urn for distilled drinking water 
> already had prill beads (google them) in it and that, alone, changed the 
> water enough that my generator shut off as if it sensed it was already 
> saturated with silver. L
> On Aug 20, 2013, at 12:00 PM, Gladys Williams wrote:
> 
>  
> I think I remember someone on the list saying in a pinch you could use rain 
> water
> to make CS.  Is this true?  And what is the danger of making CS from Spring 
> Water?
> Thank you in advance for your responses?
>  
> GWilliams
>  
>  
>    
> 
> 
>