Thanks for the info.  So, is the sea salt good, bad or indifferent?
----- Original Message -----
From: Marshall Dudley <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, August 25, 2002 8:48 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Re: buying cs instead of making it...


> Barbara Liles wrote:
>
> > Sorry Marshall.  I re-read my post and it confused me.  Let me try
again.
> >
> > What I meant to say is some generators I read about are using 3
Batteries
> > rather than 2.
> >
> > When making CS are we trying to get equal charge from a negative silver
wire
> > and a positive silver wire?
>
> The difference between 2 and 3 batteries is simply 18 or 27 volts.  The
currents
> at both electrodes will be the same, as per Norton analysis.  That is
current
> travels in a loop, and is equal at all points in the loop.
>
> >
> >
> > Then, to make a good brew, does the solution need to be stirred?
> >
>
> Most here report better results if the CS is stirred during making it.
This can
> be with a bubbler, a mechanical stirer, or even a slight heat source on
one side
> for convection stiring.
>
> >
> > Also, does the distance between the two silver wires make a difference.
> >
>
> Yes it does, but I don't have any data on that since I do not use the LVDC
> method myself.
>
> >
> > When I first started making mine, I was told that my spring water would
work
> > and didn't need the distilled water.  I know it worked to some extent,
but
> > the more I read on the list, the more I realize that the minerals in
natural
> > spring water must have an effect on my finished product so I switched to
> > distilled.
>
> That was a good decision.
>
> >
> >
> > The spring water produced a cloudy brew whereas the distilled water made
it
> > clear.
>
> The spring water probably had some salts in it, calcium chloride, calcium
> carbonate, potassium or sodium chloride.  These would react with any
silver ions
> as they come off the wire producting silver carbonate or silver chloride.
Most
> silver compounds have very low solubility, so they tend to make the water
cloudy
> until it settles out.
>
> >
> >
> > Also, since we are going back to Silver 101, when using sea salt which
makes
> > the brew yellow, is this an indicator of particle size?  I know it makes
it
> > faster, but what is it making faster?
> >
>
> It increases the conductivity, thus increasing current and the rate of
silver
> removal from the wire.
>
> >
> > This leads me to wonder about IV use.  Since sodium chloride IV solution
is
> > salty, does that change the structure of the CS.  I generally use D5W
> > thinking that the salt would change the structure.
> >
>
> It seems that silver ions will quickly combine with the chlorine in NaCl
and
> form a cloudy solution with then settles out over time.  I am not sure
just what
> happens if you put silver chloride directly into the blood.
>
> >
> > Just learning so any information is helpful. I'm still back tracking the
> > achieves attempting to not ask questions that you old timers have
addressed
> > before, but that is a slow process.
>
> We may be old timers, but we keep learning as well.  I would NEVER have
thought
> that taking large amounts of HVAC CS would do what they did to my
fingernails.
> That is a new data point for me.
>
> Marshall
>
>
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