EcoQuest Int'l in Greenville ,TN., makes an outstanding water purifier-about$400.It first ozonates the water, then submits it to uv light, then it has a chamber that photo-oxidizes the water(mixture of first two steps), then it runs through a charcoal filter with an Enhlehard ATS lead filter. That should almost make distilled water.It requires no plumbing at the sink. I used to sell them. TJ Garland

From: "I Anderson" <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "*Silver-List* (E-mail)" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CS>polluted water
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2002 01:26:22 +1300

Satchid,

Do you have a holding tank for your water? This would be the ideal
place to either generate CS in situ, or to add premade CS. Your
generator design (still awaiting schematic ;-) ) would be perfect for
generating in situ, assuming it resets itself when the concentration
drops as fresh water is added. It is lucky that the ionic content of
the water is so low to allow this, (although such a low dissolved
mineral content is unusual). You could then do a series of challenge
tests to determine the lowest concentration required to make the water
sterile.

Having said that, it may be just as easy to pump the well water
through a 0.2um (micrometre) filter, which will remove bacteria, or
use a reverse osmosis filter (but this is wasteful of water). UV
sterilisation or ozone sterilisation might be other options worth
considering.

Regards
Ivan.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Satchid [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Tuesday, 15 January 2002 1:14 p.m.
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: RE: CS>polluted water
>
>
> sorry for the mistakes in the spelling, I repeat:
>
>
>
> Dear researchers,
>
> 2 months ago we had a well drilled 40 m deep. The geological
> institute in
> Brussels told us that there would be good drinkable water
> without treatment
> (Before starting to drill). Now the tests from the laboratory
> revealed that
> there is very bad bacteria (even bacteria that could kill
> someone) in the
> water. This is because the well is about 50 m away from a
> canal built for
> boat traffic about 100 years ago.
>
> There are very little or no salts in the water, the ion
> contend is 1.5 ppt.
> This well was very expensive to drill. Therefore we want to use it.
>
> Would an injection of ionic silver be able to make the water
> drinkable?
>
> If so, How would I proceed to do this? Would it be better to
> make the cs in
> the water stream in real time or inject premade cs in the water?
>
> I will appreciate every suggestion.
>
>
> Willy.
>
>
>
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