That is the general plan; it is better to do the dilutions in larger volumes than minims, because the measurement error will be less.
The silver reagents are designed to measure very small amounts of silver contamination in surface waters; the CS is stronger by several orders of magnitude. PPM = mg/L James Osbourne Holmes [email protected] FTNWO -----Original Message----- From: w8w8 [SMTP:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, June 23, 2000 10:05 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: CS>HI 93737 Silver Meter Interesting that you should point out the Hanna model HI93737 since it measures silver and not conductivity. I have been looking at the specs for this instrument for about a month now and figured that it might not be applicable for measuring CS manufacturing for a couple of reasons. First, I could find no reference to it in the CS archives and I thought you guys knew everything about everything. >don't we wish< Someplace I think that I read the relationship between ppm and mg/L. I thought it was a 1:1 relationship but so far I have been too lazy to look it up. Old age will do it every time. I wasn't sure, but if the above is the case, it seems like a full scale reading of 1.000 mg/L was too sensitive and I would have to do dilutions. Depending on the volume of the cuvet, something like 10 drops of CS in the cuvet and fill with distilled water maybe. Do you or any of your fellow brains know why it wouldn't work? Erwin Ivan Anderson wrote: > http://www.hannainst.com/products/ion/93737.htm > > Ivan > -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: [email protected] -or- [email protected] with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: [email protected] Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

