Friends,

In this interesting creativeness developed around the Mink ranch subject, I might have missed something, but I do not recall anyone saying anything about the quality of the water being used for making EIS in the flow-through system.

Is it tap water? I remember how much emphasis has been placed on the great importance of using only steam distilled water of the best quality available in order to produce adequate EIS for human consumption. Or is it that in mink and other animals the biological laws work differently?

Regards to all.

Carlos

From: "Dan Nave" <dan.n...@nilfisk-advance.com>
Reply-To: silver-list@eskimo.com
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Subject: RE: CS>Mink rancher
Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2006 15:30:26 -0600

http://www.nwtmintbullion.com/silver_bars_100.php

Oops, they are 100 and 100 OUNCE bars...

Here's a 10 ounce bar:

http://www.nwtmint.com/store/index.php?mod=product&id_prd=1367

and

http://www.nwtmint.com/store/index.php?pageNum_rsMan=2&totalRows_rsMan=4
2&mod=manufacturer&id_man=29

Dan

-----Original Message-----
From: M. G. Devour [mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com]
Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2006 8:57 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CS>Mink rancher

Dear Dan,

You write:
> I noticed you added a factor for electrode waste.  I don't think that
> is really necessary since with that kind of water flow all silver
> should go into the water, and since it is to be mixed with "food" who
> knows what sort of chemistry it will have - ions or particles, who
> cares?...  So the total silver is what I was concentrating on.

Given the geometry I was describing you couldn't allow the silver pieces
to completely erode away. You'd have water leaking out the holes the
wires come through, not to mention the wire and/or brass washer would
also start eroding and contaminating the water with copper, zinc,
nickel, etc... So I figure the coins (or bars) would be replaced when
they got thin enough they would start exposing stuff.

They would have to disassemble the cell and inspect the electrodes a few
times during the first month of operation to get familiar with how they
erode with use.

> It looks like you can buy 100 and 1000 gram ingots of silver.  Just
> pound them out or have a jeweler flatten them through some sort of
> roller press.

That sounds interesting. Where did you see those?

> Yes, I was on the low end of the silver cost estimate.  Cheap at even
> twice the price.

<grin>

Be well,

Mike D.
[Mike Devour, Citizen, Patriot, Libertarian]
[mdev...@eskimo.com                        ]
[Speaking only for myself...               ]



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