Why not use a nebulizer from a pharmacy store? Leo ------------------------------------------------------------------------
"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote: > Hi Terry and everyone, > > I have used only O2. It is the same regulator used for a shop welding rig. > They cost about 100 SDRs. Prestolite is a commonly available brand. Any > regulator RATED FOR USE WITH OXYGEN in the correct pressure range may be > used. Oxygen regulators must be hydrocarbon lubricant free; grease or oil > will burn explosively in a pure O2 atmosphere. The pressure works best in > the +/- 20 PSI range. Bear in mind; the regulator is not is "approved" for > medical use. All bottled O2 is USP grade. I think the "R" size tank is the > best compromise of portability and easy handling vs time of use per bottle. > You may purchase or lease from your local welding supply company. Here, a > refill costs about 10 clams. > > Of course medical regulators may be used. Some have a L/min gauge. Not > necessary; you just adjust the pressure so that the airbrush works well; you > are not concerned about the O2 actual delivered amount except with a > newborn. Then COMPETNENT MEDICAL EXPERTISE IS NECESSARY; a bit too much O2 > and the baby can be made permanently blind due to oxidation of components of > the retina. > > When I tried to price small simple inexpensive O2 regulators from local > medical supply companies they treated me like I was trying to buy morphine. > I have heard they are available on the net, but don't have anymore info. > > The most complicated part is any adapters you need from the output of the > regulator to fit the input of the airbrush. Take your bits and pieces to > the welding supply and they will be able to fabricate or order the correct > fittings. They cost less than 5 in most instances. The assembly is simple > and obvious. If it fits, screw it together. If it does not, seek an > adapter. Be gentle; the threads are fine. Fingers tighten to be certain the > connection is not cross threaded before applying a preferably non-crushing > and non-toothed tool. Dish soap and water will reveal leaks at any joint. > Be careful with wrenches; you have a lot of leverage in the small fittings. > You know the joint is approaching tight enough when the torque sensation > rises abruptly. Tighten lightly, and bubble the joint, tightening more only > if necessary. Make sure that the tools are stored with the kit. Put the > whole kit in a easy-to-carry container. Hard-shell is harder to carry but > better for situations that may require rough handling. Are any state mil > guys listening? > > The airbrush has only one adjustment. It is possible by tweaking the > pressure and that venturi adjustment until no spray or mist is seen, but > holding the airbrush a couple of inches from your hand reveals moisture > accumulation. I presume that is when it is making the smallest particles. > > Of course the spray can be made coarser and the device used to spray > external areas. It is probably a waste to use 02 for that purpose, but > there may be some benefit of the O2 getting into solution and there > certainly is little likelihood of harm. > > The enameled steel lid of the airbrush's glass containers react with the > sol. The turns dirty yellow in a short period of storage therein. Do not > store the sol in them. I am looking for HDPE or other acceptable > replacements. Choices abound in Lab supply catalogs. The airbrush is > fasten to the lid with a nut and washer, and can be easily transferred to a > plastic lid that is not too thick. The little tube from the airbrush can > be shortened or replace with a longer tube to reach the bottom of the > bottle. > > If using a compressed air source, even a bicycle pump, ONE SHOULD TAKE INTO > ACCOUNT THE PRESENCE OF OIL IN THE PUMP, be it hand or machine powered. > Those living in LA will probably not notice the difference. Oil-less is > best, or if a manual pump, perhaps replacing the leather cup on the piston > with a new one lubricated with a food oil will be good practice. In a pinch > you could make a usable leather cup from available articles. Just > disassemble the pump and look at the cup. Surplus sources often sell used > oil less pumps. A lab or dental vacuum pump may be used as a pressure pump. > > Anyone handling compressed gasses should LEARN CORRECT HANDLING, STORAGE AND > TRANSPORTATION PRACTICES for these substances. Your local welding shop > probably has free handouts, or can let you copy their regulations. Don't > just stand the bottle up on a floor or table. Sooner or later you will tip > it over. Get a carrier with feet, or strap the bottle to a table leg with > something. O2 can cause the combustion of virtually anything to accelerate > explosively. Once in the space shuttle, at 16 PSI pure O2, a crew members > hand caught on fire. Not his glove, his hand. If a bottle simply falls > over, it can break the regulator. Worse case, the fitting at the top of the > bottle can break off, creating a bottle rocket effect and causing a fire > hazard at the same time. > > This simple device replaces thousands of dollars of medical equipment and > drugs, and works better. There are, no doubt, some contraindications that > will be proposed. I haven't heard of them for anyone but very newborn > infants. > > If a medical professional can offer the list the age parameters for > newborns, that would be useful. > > Current opinion from some medical professionals is that this stuff will stop > respiratory 'rax if administered promptly. That pathogen does release a > very destructive endotoxin when the cell wall lyses. Lacking specific > information I would start with the most minimal amount with anyone who has a > well developed condition that is not DEFINITIVLY DIAGNOSED ---organism(s) > specific--- condition (If that can be possible) and observe what happens > before taking a lot. It is up to the user to figure out what "little" and > "a lot" means. I suspect that even one toke will kill a lot of bacteria. > > Every user of which I am aware is astounded at the rapidity of the > beneficial results. > > Now, considering the likelihood of the trucks not running at anytime in the > foreseeable future, and there being no source of O2, who knows a good route > to distill and liquefy oxygen at home in your spare time and for only > pennies ? Are there small devices? Probably. Do they cost a fortune---even > used? I haven't looked. What is involved in making one from existing > readily-available make-do components? Could one cascade a bunch of > domestic or commercial freezer condensing units or will the pressures be too > high for the components?---that is my guess. Could a group do what is > difficult for one? Yes, but only if they stop bickering and recognize our > common problem. > > Bottom line: one use and you have in most cases more than recovered your > costs, and without the mind-damaging effect of being exposed to the drivel > in the out-of-date pop-culture and disinformation publications in the > waiting room---assuming the doctor is still in the office, and not already > stuck in traffic at roadblock set up at every exit to the area for the > purpose shipping everyone without the right papers to the alleged quarantine > camps. In boxcars, if need-be. Legislation has already been written. > > James-Osbourne: Holmes > > Drifting off our central focus for but a moment--- > The time to write this is my holiday present to everyone; I hope there is > much fun, joy and love in everyone's life, regardless of our individual and > collective situations this year. Love, peace, awareness---and keep your > powder dry. Here is a stocking stuffer: > http://www2.justnet.ne.jp/~kiti/Ufo/wtc/wtc.htm > A hilarious and almost incomprehensible machine-translation that is still > better than nothing may be done at: http://world.altavista.com/ > Paste the Jap URL into the translate box and select "Japanese to English" > from the drop-down menu. > > Remember...you have always known-from the long-range perspective, this is > all just a ride. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Terry Chamberlin [mailto:tcj...@yahoo.ca] > Sent: Friday, December 21, 2001 5:53 PM > To: silver-list@eskimo.com > Subject: CS>Unidentified subject! > > James-Osborne said: > "..He drove up to Santa Fe and started sucking the > airbrush. In three days he was almost symptom free.." > > Did he use oxygen or just air? Nebulizing (or > airbrushing) with air is easy, getting oxygen is more > complicated and expensive. > > Terry > > ______________________________________________________ > Send your holiday cheer with http://greetings.yahoo.ca > > -- > 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: > silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com > with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. > > To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com > Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html > List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>