Most likely the water you're using is not so pure and the 3 nines are
delivering a lot of current right from the start.
The purpose of the grain of wheat bulb is to make it so the generator
won't catch fire if the electrodes short out, though the heating element
may display a sort or variable current control because the hotter it gets,
the more resistive it gets.
You can probably use a resistor or a potentiometer instead.
Ode
At 08:00 AM 7/11/2003 -0500, you wrote:
Hi,
I saw this "immediate misting" phenomenon last weekend for the first
time. My friend's uncle demonstrated his CS generator; which uses 3 nine
volt batteries, a "grain of wheat" lamp, and two 12 gage silver wired
together (no current limiting, no voltage limiting).
Please let me know where I might acquire a "grain of wheat" lamp/bulb. I
asked the folks at two different Radio Shack stores. They are clueless, in
this regard.
Best regards,
:) Marv
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Monett" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2003 12:56 AM
Subject: CS>Re: H2O2, ag(+), NaCl
url: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/m61090.html
CS>Re: H2O2, ag(+), NaCl
From: jrowland
Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2003 22:42:21
>> ...When you start the cs process using 3 nines, there
>> is no mist. The mist does not appear until the end of the process...
>Misting begins within 10 seconds at the anode of my three 9-volt battery
>set-up.
>jr
Gee, jr, that has never been reported before. Perhaps you are using too
much deuterium, and you got the leads to your dvm reversed?
Best Regards,
Mike Monett
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