Thanks Ode....where do you find a grounding wire?
On Thursday, September 3, 2015 7:50 AM, Dee <[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks Ode....Dee
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On 3 Sep 2015, at 11:04, Ode Coyote <[email protected]> wrote:
Copper can be toxic [as can zinc], but you need some and the body regulates it
very closely.
It has to because copper is VERY common in the environment and some water has
so much copper in it naturally that it will leave green or blue stains in the
sink.
Copper shares the same elimination system that silver does using Selenium as
the chelating agent.
Might want to supplement that.
Transformer wire is pretty small in diameter and has a heavy hard to remove
coating of varnish as the insulator. Coax cable is likewise quite thin.
#12 or #10 romex or grounding wire is the way to go and is .999 copper by
industry standard.
Copper will not form a stable ion, therefore does not contribute to increasing
conductivity when being electrolysed in distilled water...no "runaway"..but
also doesn't register on a PPM or conductivity meter. I can detect no flavor.
The only way to tell you made it is with a laser pointer and there's no way to
tell how strong.
Colloidal copper generators can be quite simple.
I use a 24 volt DC power supply with an LED in series with one of the wires
just to show that all the connections are made and current is flowing.
Wires....about 8-10 inches long.
Ode
On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 3:35 AM, Dee <[email protected]> wrote:
Isn't copper toxic though? Dee
Sent from my iPad
On 2 Sep 2015, at 22:46, Deborah Gerard <[email protected]> wrote:
Hello group,
On another silver group is a gal that is raving about colloidal copper and how
great it is and also is easy to make. I went briefly into the CS archives here
and there was a mention of romex cable from Menards. I am curious about the
copper wire. I have a transformer and Coaxial cable...can I take the copper
wire that is in one of these and make the colloidal copper?
Thanks for any and all input in advance,
Debbie