I am not sure you can reach that conclusion.  Sure only .8 ppm will
dissolve, but the dissolved portion can quickly move into the blood stream
sublingually, and as the concentration goes down, the precipitate can then
dissolve until .8 ppm is reached again.  This would be a rather slow
process, probably taking 5 or 10 minutes to redissolve the majority of
silver in 20 ppm or so CS, but that is pretty close to what you are
reporting, so I don't see any contradiction there.

Marshall

Mike Monett wrote:

>   sol <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>     The interesting part is the cs shows a white dispersion very quickly
>
>   after it  enters  the  mouth.  According  to  Marshall's  paper, the
>   solubility of silver chloride is about 800ppb. So it should  make no
>   difference how  strong the cs is when taken  sublingually.  I assure
>   you, it  does. There is a kind of zing to it. Ode has  mentioned the
>   same effect.
>
>   Regards,
>
>   Mike M.
>
>   http://silversol.freewebpage.org/index.htm
>
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