Hi Bill,

He He he. well you may pursue that questions the rest fo your life becaues I 
dont think anybody knows the answers to those queshtions to this day. Even the 
scientists that are studying it all have not come to any conclusino on that. I 
think in a wire the electrons move but in a liquid then bothe the holes nad the 
electrons move. and what are electrons anyway? are they particles or waves or 
jsut cloauds of some energy or an etheric vortex or an interference pattern of 
the nuclear radiation wave fronts. If you can nail that one down then your 
doing good.




Take care,
 V


> So, Dan, 
>    
>   You support the "hole flow' theory of current flow as opposed to the
> electron flow in which the negative pole releases the electrons for current 
> flow?
>    
>   Does the positive charge 'suck' the molecules off of the positive
> element or does the negatively charged current 'knock' them off of the 
> positive electrode?

>   I'm really interested in finding out just how this works.  Is there a
> knowledgable individual out there who really knows?
>    
>   Bill Keen
>    
>   
> Dan Nave <[email protected]> wrote:
>   Perhaps "Ole Bob" will answer this but in the meantime I'll chime in 
> with what I've learned here...

> The metals will come off the positive electrode (anode) which, in this 
> case, is the silver one. The brass is the negative electrode so it is 
> not going to be releasing metal ions or particles into the water. With 
> this DC system we should get the good quality "colloidal silver" that we
> expect.

> Dan



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