The color is an artifact of the yellowish lighting while taking the photo.
The color 'reproduction' is not accurate.
[But may be similar to colors that you see in 'your' setup.]
There is no 'yellow'
There is no 'golden'
It is white.
It is pure white.
It is nothing but white.
The only times I've seen any such colors in the particle 'stream' was when current density was too high.
The current density is not too high.
I've seen silver hydroxide listed in chemical cataloges as a white powder. Leastways, I think I did. [Can't find it listed ANYWHERE now..dang!]
One reference to silver hydroxide as a tan powder used in anion experiments
A tan deposit can form on one electrode under certain conditions but it's not always tan. White is more usual for me.
After drying, that white deposit smears shiny silver on fingers etc.
Ode
At 01:32 PM 3/27/2005 -0500, you wrote:
>
>Re: CS>ppm meters
>From: Ode Coyote
>Date: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 07:05:34
>http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/m78972.html
>
> > http://www.silverpuppy.com/resource/
>
> > There is no tan color in that photo that's not an artifact of the
> > lighting adding a golden hue to everything.
>
> > I think I made note of that somewhere in there. The particle cloud
> > is pure white in real life.
>
> > Ode
>
> As you can see in the photos, the color depends on the lighting and
> where you look in the mist trail. The color fades as the oxides
> dissipate into the dw.
>
> Jason refers to it as yellow:
>
> "Anywhere between 15 and 30 minutes, one should notice a thin
> yellow cloud or a yellow "wisp" drifting between the electrodes."
>
> http://www.silvermedicine.org/usage.html
>
> Utopia Silver calls it gold:
>
> "Here is the "golden mist" process at work as the solution nears
> 10 ppm. This is the optimum concentration using this process."
>
> http://www.utopiasilver.com/generator.htm
>
> Peter Lindemann calls it yellow:
>
> "Then finally, a faint yellow mist will begin to form. Within a
> few minutes, the reaction will speed up, but the particles
> produced will be a golden-yellow as viewed with a flashlight."
>
> http://www.silvergen.com/colloida.htm
>
> Others in the archives have called it tan or brown. To me, it's tan.
>
>Regards,
>
>Mike Monett
>
>
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