the silver puppy material states that it makes 10 ppm in it's standard
set-up.
it shuts off by measuring electrical conductivity.
if you make a batch and wait overnite, the electrical conductivity
drops (i guess)
and re-running the 10 ppm batch results in 20 ppm before the unit shuts
down.
i tried it once and the silver ion taste was noticeably stronger after
second batch.
people say trem's sg-7 unit rock for larger batches.
the silver puppy rocks for smaller amounts for sure.
i used to own an sg-6 and never got down with it.
the silver puppy unit resonates with me.
in specific, the sg-6 unit was noisy, confused me with it's sequencing
of l.e.d.s,
rejected lots of distilled water (walgreen's too), and i found i was
equivocal about
tasting -or not tasting- the telltale mettalic taste of the silver ions.
the silver puppy has never confused me and i taste the silver readily.
On Jun 14, 2004, at 8:33 PM, Terry wrote:
No doubt a stupid question for those in the know, but as one who has
been using a Silvergen SG6 for several months to make 5-10ppm EIS, how
do you do "two passes"?
Terry
-----Original Message-----
From: William Meyer [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, June 14, 2004 5:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>20 ppm CS
well
on the small scale, the silver puppy claims 20ppm with two passes
separated by
12 hours or so.
the silverpuppy uses thermal stirring.
gee it works great for me.
On Jun 14, 2004, at 5:24 PM, Marshall Dudley wrote:
I have a company that is wanting large quantities of 20 ppm CS. I make
5
ppm normally and have made 10 by making two passes through our
machine. But
I don't think I can get 20 that way, the particle size simply gets way
too
large.
Anyone have any good methods for making large quantites of 20 ppm CS? I
would like to be able to produce at least 3 or 4 gallons an hour. LVDC
I
believe would be too slow. HVAC gets it too hot unless using multiple
passes.
Bob, you have played with underwater sputtering I think. How does that
work? How does the microwave HVDC work?
Thanks,
Marshall
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...Like the martial arts practice of Aikido. Rather than oppose your
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