Jason,
I just received a new Silver gen, my old one was 18 yrs old and worked 
perfectly, but my kids decided I needed a new one, so the new Silver gen has 
flat electrodes is this good? It was hard to talk to the maker of the product 
as he does not like to talk much so I know nothing about these flat electrodes. 
 
Any information would be helpful.
Thank You 
Mary--------------------------------------------
On Tue, 2/17/15, Neville <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: RE: CS>Electrode cleaning?
 To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
 Date: Tuesday, February 17, 2015, 6:46 PM
 
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 #yiv0707868960 Sorry
 Jason, don't know anything about flat electrodes.
  Praps I shouldn't have said anything.  You know the
 old saying, "Rather not say anything and let people
 think you're an idiot, than open your mouth and remove
 all doubt"...LOL.
 Thanks for your insight regarding
 pads.
 Well here's
 one hypothesis, the suspected poor quality DW used on that
 occasion, in combination with the stir bar spinning action,
 may have developed a situation whereby whilst in storage
 some silver was pulled to the centre where the stir bar
 spun?  Cross contamination?  I know silver is not
 magnetic, but who knows if other unknown contaminants in the
 DW may have combined to encourage that end result?  I
 don't know, perhaps a magnetic field was created, again
 with the combination of impurities in that particular batch
 of DW, created an opening/situation for some
 "reaction?" or agglomeration or
 "something?" to take place, and to take place
 *only* where the stir bar was situated?
 What confounded me was the fact that
 it not only occurred once, it occurred twice after filtering
 and cleaning that storage vessel out?
 Another of life's mysteries I
 guess.
 Cheers
 N.
 
 > Date: Tue, 17 Feb
 2015 17:50:02 -0800
 > From:
 [email protected]
 > To:
 [email protected]
 > Subject: Re:
 CS>Electrode cleaning?
 > 
 > Hi Neville:
 > 
 > I remember reading your initial post and
 being puzzled by it, but not 
 > having
 anything of value to contribute.
 > 
 > As far as scrub pads contaminating pure
 silver, since silver is way 
 > softer
 than steel, risk fo contamination is low unless you think
 
 > cleaning the silver is a sanding
 project.
 > 
 > You make
 my point.  I myself use a plastic scrubber for my 
 > straight/rounded electrodes, and have no
 problem.  The point of using an 
 >
 abrasive is to eliminate or reduce the electrode
 degradation, which is a 
 > significant
 issue in my opinion, as far as it effects the brewing 
 > process.  You might be able to get away
 with using a paper towel to 
 > clean
 electrodes, but you also might be surprised at the amount of
 
 > jagged edges are actually created on
 the silver electrode in the 
 > standard
 "home brew" setup, over time.
 >
 
 > Cleaning my Silvergen SG7 electrodes
 is much more involved.  Luckily, 
 > the
 degradation of the electrodes is very minimal due to the
 reverse 
 > polarity used and the rapid
 water circulation.  I have to use makeup 
 > removers, which are made from a dense
 cotton, similar in shape to Q-Tips.
 > 
 > Since these are flat electrodes, ***the
 silver oxide particles that do 
 > build
 up*** on the electrodes provides enough abrasion to
 reproduce a 
 > completely smooth surface
 on the electrodes, thanks to the perfect 
 > design of the electrode configuration.
 > 
 > ~Jason
 > 
 > 
 > 
 
                                         



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