Hi Ya'all,

"ole Bob" has a problem. On 10/15/98 I printed out 38 pages of data from
CSProsystems. It was a combination of his work plus excerpts from
several other authors, and I am having problems with the contradictions
between the authors and maybe one of you
gurus can help.

Bruce stated that "In this type of colloid the ideal size of the silver
particles falls within the range of 0.005-0.015 microns in diameter."

He further states, "In a true colloid these particles are about .010 to
.001 microns in diameter."  (0.001 to 0.010 lets keep dimensions in
order)

Also "The smallest capillaries in the body are 1 to 4 nanometers in
diameters.  (or 0.001 to 0.004 microns in diameter)

>From the Peter Lindeman section, "You cannot use deionized water because
it doesn't conduct electricity well enough to start the reaction." (it
may take a little longer but it does conduct)

On the use of salt, Actual electron microscope photographs of this
material show silver particles in the range of .05 to .15 microns. These
particles are TOO LARGE to form a colloidal suspension,"

This is from CSPRO.
 In the "Make your own colloidal silver" New Technology Report,
paragraph "Particle size" is stated, "The average human cell (including
blood) is between 10 - 100 microns." Question, should this be
nanometers????

Here is the problem. If the smallest capillary is 1 to 4 nanometers how
can we stuff a blood cell that is 10 to 100 microns through it
???????????

I am no "rocket scientist" but some thing is WRONG.

"ole Bob"