But since the physical properties of silver and water limit how much silver
will STAY in the water [solubility limits], relatively all of that 42,000
will be sludge on the bottom as silver hydroxide and silver oxide....wasted.
Some suspend the garbage in the water by making the water thicker, like old
used dirty motor oil can hold a lot of dirt
...MSP  Mild Silver Protein can be 50 or even 1000+ PPM,  big chunks of
silver suspended in jello.
Lots of silver, little benefit.

Ode

On Fri, Dec 11, 2015 at 3:31 AM, Debra & David <[email protected]> wrote:

> A Faraday calculation of volume/current/time provides the answer.
>
> The 'puppy has controlled current (about 1 mA at the electrodes) so a
> Faraday calculation using current, volume and time can provide an answer.
>
> In a pint each EXTRA hour adds about 8ppm. In a quart its about 4 ppm per
> hour.
>
> But note that the water has to be conductive. (i.e. if you are using
> distilled water you have to have already run the 'puppy in auto mode).
>
> In a pint, 42,000 ppm would take about 5250 hours.
>
> David
>
>
>
> On 11/12/2015 6:41 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> Subject:
> CS>Silver Puppy "ppm" numbers
> From:
> Jerry Durand <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
> Date:
> 10/12/2015 6:28 AM
> To:
> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
> <[email protected]>
> I had someone ask me for the "ppm" number if I run the Silver Puppy way
> into overtime like 12 hours or so.  I know that almost all people are
> reading the ppm number off a tds meter that's calibrated for table salt,
> getting people to understand calibration is a losing battle.
>
> I just picked up a batch that's been sitting around for a while and it
> reads 14 uSeimens, so for that batch what should I tell them?
>
> Or do I just do like the eBay marketers and make up a number?  "It's 42000
> ppm, it's REALLY good stuff!"  :)
>
> --
> Jerry Durand, Durand Interstellar, Inc.  www.interstellar.com
> tel: +1 408 356-3886, USA toll free: 1 866 356-3886
>
>
>