if you would like to "distill" some of the tap water, it is really quite 
simple, my a/c instructor told me about this method, used to clean freon as an 
experiment he tried, should work well with water in warm weather, though you 
would need a tester to verify how clean it came through. Thought I would share 
it so someone could try anyway, as I am not home enough to do these kinds of 
tests at this time. 
  Simply place a bottle of the tap water outside where it is very warm/hot, run 
a tube through a window or small opening, into another empty bottle, natural 
process occurs, the vapor that heat creates becomes liquid again on the inside 
"cool" bottle. 
  If you try this let me know how it goes, have thought many times of trying it 
but havent gotten settled enough to do such things yet, still 
unpacking...ugh...at 1 day a week it will take me 3 years to get it all 
unpacked....lol...good luck.           Godspeed all, Lisa.

Marshall Dudley <[email protected]> wrote:
  "Jonathan B. Britten" wrote:

> I should have mentioned that we can indeed make our own products at
> almost no cost. I've never tried, but if it works, deodorant would be
> very nearly free. The products in the stores are oven quite lucrative
> for the manufacturers.
>
> One could make a pint or two of EIS, store it in plastic atomizer
> bottles, and have a ready supply of deodorant for pennies. That could
> add up to enormous savings over time.
>
> I should try. I'll post the results.
>
> BTW, seems plain tap water would work all right for this purpose;
> you'd end up with silver salts, but for use on the skin it shouldn't
> matter much. In my little home experiments, tap water produces lots
> of sliver salts very quickly. One should never ingest these, but for a
> homemade deodorant, tap water would be cheaper and faster. On an
> automatic generator, the shutoff is pretty fast.
>

Actually in the case of argyria, silver salts on the skin is worse than
taking by mouth. Silver salts have been known to cause argyria in a matter
of minutes on the skin with only one application. The reason is that when
taken by mouth it would take a good bit to reach the threashold value of
salts in the skin, but when applied directly it can only take a drop.

Marshall

>
> JBB
>
> On Friday, Sep 1, 2006, at 05:41 Asia/Tokyo, Richard Harris wrote:
>
> > I have been using 19ppm CS twice daily as a splash-on
> > deodorant and have been very pleased with it.
>
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