--- Trem <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi List,
> 
> I've been recently making CG using HVAC underwater
> arcing.  It sometimes comes out violet and sometimes
> more of a gray color but it's always crystal clear .
>  It seems the arc spacing has a bearing on this. 
> Does anyone else make it using HVAC and if so would
> you be interested in comparing notes?  Off list will
> be fine unless others want to hear too.
> 
> I'm not sure what the ionic/colloidal ratio is but
> the PWT reads between 8 and 10 usually.  And it
> doesn't seem to be any different on the two colors.
> 
> I've been drinking it but also want to compare notes
> with others about their responses to it.
> 
> Trem 
> [email protected]
> 
Due to all the hoopla about N03 with AC high voltage
arcing methods, I would wonder does an underwater arc
avoid some of these ojections about combination  with
nitrogen in the atmosphere? I did not know that a NST
could produce an underwater arc. Did you have problems
with the arc skirting the water surface instead, and
did you use wires in a V formation for the underwater
arc? I did note that early testing of high voltage AC
without an arc, (as in DC methods), the water would
heat up and hardly no colloidal effects showed up. (
This was with silver, not gold) Back then however due
to the unique way I was generating the high voltage,
it was possible to use a single high voltage
electrode, with the opposite electrode not immersed in
the water, but given as a metal plate the glass rests
on. This then allows for a very "high" current
limitation by the dielectric of the  intervening glass
and water. A very poor method of introducing colloids,
but I was able to photograph some colloids falling
from a single silver coin with this method. Do you see
any problems with just using the conventional low
voltage DC method for CG? What about using gold as the
passive Positive anode for a conventional Silver-Gold
collodial solution? Does consensus indicate that the
positive electrode contributes practically no
colloids? Visual observations seem to indicate a doubt
on this matter, which if then true we might expect a
mixture of both colloids? 
Pardon my ignorance of electrochemistry here, just
wondering about a few things regarding the gold thing.

HDN


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