"Battery water" could be either Distilled or Demineralised water.

Here in Australia we have both Distilled and Demineralised water.  I 
won't/can't try to explain the difference, I'll let someone else explain the 
chemistry etc if they wish, but, I only use Distilled but NOT Demineralised for 
making EIS, and NOT for drinking as normal drinking water.  Drinking Distilled 
water all the time will raise the acidity in the blood/body or whatever. 
(considered opinion)

It's the same as people calling the home made product as 'colloidal silver' 
instead of EIS, subtle difference, similar to Demin water and Distilled water.

Again, I'll let others argue and debate the subtle differences on 'silver' if 
they wish, but don't include me in the debate/argue about it.

N.
________________________________
From: Ode Coyote <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, 4 March 2019 11:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS> Interesting Information

I have heard that  auto parts shops carry "battery water" which is distilled 
water, but not sterilized for human consumption.
If making EIS with it doesn't sterilize it, why bother making EIS ...right?

On Sun, Mar 3, 2019 at 11:33 AM K.A.Wright 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Actually, I'm in Scotland 😉, we voted to stay in. Yes distilled water has to be 
ordered and you have to be careful that it states steam distilled. Obviously 
it's costly when you include the delivery but I wouldn't try using anything 
else in th *pup* However if the tap water is not guaranteed safe for drinking 
(I'm not thinking permanently but since the chemicals used in the treatment 
plants can't be stockpiled due to short shelf life, then they're may be 
temporary disruption due to the bottlenecks at Dover) then you reckon it would 
take a full cup of EIS to a gallon would make it safe to drink? I've tried 
googling it but get so many conflicting answers

Cheers
Kirsteen


On 3 March 2019, at 17:00, Sandee George 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: