If you heavily ozonate a house with any adsorbtive materials such as sheet rock, plaster or other porous materials you are going to have out gassing going on for sometime after. You also may find rubber and plastics breaking down over a period of time if you continue the practice.
I looked into the practice when I found there was mold in a house I was renting and a friend who uses it in water purification offered to bring his machine over to try and treat the sources, which were heavily rotted wood under the house and in the walls. Garnet On Thu, 2004-11-25 at 21:39, Dan Nave wrote: > What is the purpose of bubbling it through water? > > Dan > > > Re: CS>tea tree oil and ozone > > * From: Tony Moody wrote: > * Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 23:36:53 > > Hi Sally, > > A few things you could do with your 'strong' ozone generator. > > Mount it up high, a few inches to a foot below the ceiling. Ozone is > heavier than air and tends to flow naturally downwards, thus mixing > with the room air. > > Use it when the house is un-occupied and then use a timer to switch > it off automatically after, say an hour. > > Use an on/off timer. Plug that into the wall and plug the ozonator into > the timer. Set the timer to something like 5 minutes on and 10 > minutes off. > > If you can then let the ozone outlet pass through water either a mist > spray or bubbled through water. > > Check to see if there is not an adjustment or a connection for > reducing the output. > > Be Happy, > Tony > > > -- > The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. > > Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org > > To post, address your message to: [email protected] > Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html > > Address Off-Topic messages to: [email protected] > OT Archive: http://escribe.com/health/silverofftopiclist/index.html > > List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]> >

