On Mon, 8 Jul 2002 22:21:25 EDT, [email protected] wrote:

>I was making calculations that for an average batch of ~10ppm 

10 ppm is the same as 10 mg per liter (1000 grams) of water.

1 teaspoon is about 5 milliliters.

So ... 1 teaspoon of 10 ppm CS contains about .05 mg of silver (1/200
of 10 mg).

>(using Herx's 
>Calculator), I was ending up with roughly .6mg of silver per teaspoon -- 
>which is obviously many, many times the amount Wayne mentioned.  If someone 
>wants some of my numbers to plug into this equasion to see if they come 
>anywhere close to matching mine, the batch I made last night was 8oz, 
>"cooked" for 90 minutes (5400 seconds), at an average of .41mA.  I plugged my 
>mA reading into the Herx Calculator every 5 minutes and ended up with it 
>showing 12.09ppm.

-- Dean -- from (almost) Des Moines -- KB0ZDF


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