>
>  The big difference is my current setup would be dark yellow  by now.
>  I am  still  using straight rods for the anode, and  a  "W"  for the
>  cathode.
##  It did go tea colored about two hours after removing power  [blackish
brown]
 I was doing the write up immediately after stopping the batch.
>
>  I have noticed a drop in performance lately - maybe it's  partly due
>  to the crud I am letting build up on the anode. Soon I will clean it
>  off with H2O2 and see if it makes any difference.
>
>  > Salt test:
>  > Enough salt to leave some undissolved in bottom of a shot glass.
>  > Turned milky white..but not like skim milk or anything.
>
>  Yes, I would expect a very strong dispersion. Could you  see objects
>  behind the glass?
##  Yes
>
>  The big  advantage  of  the lower current  density  is  it  needs no
>  stirring, which  would  be  a  heavy drain  on  a  battery  and less
>  suitable for  use  in remote areas or  third  world  countries where
>  batteries are  expensive. Stirring also adds to the cost,  and  I am
>  trying to drive that down to the absolute minimum and still maintain
>  quality. When  you  depend  on donations,  every  tenth  of  a penny
>  counts.
###  Seems that a very small solar cell would do the job.
Ode


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