Sarah,
There is no magnet to attract silver.
For small batch processing precipitation is uncomplicated and inexpensive.
Sherman

Sent from my iPhone
Sherman George
858-229-4368


On Aug 30, 2016, at 18:00, Sarah Bliss 
<bl...@sarahblissart.com<mailto:bl...@sarahblissart.com>> wrote:

Thanks Amanda, Scott, Pip, Sherman and David!  I very much appreciate all the 
info.

I appreciate the links to Kodak’s info, Sherman.  Unfortunately, I’m not able 
to access further links from that page.  Seems I need program membership, but I 
don’t find info on what that is.

Great to learn about onions as a temporary fix, Pip!

Sounds like the most problematic chemicals are in bleach, fix, and hypoclear.   
If spent chemicals are decanted and taken to a toxic waste site, how much of a 
concern are the trace chemicals and silver in washes?  Many folks seem to think 
the impact on the septic system is not of major concern, which leaves me with a 
concern about drinking water and general environmental health.  Searches online 
bring up opinions running the gamut, but we’ll be drinking water that has these 
untreated chemicals in them.

And do  I have it right that installing a silver recovery system is as simple 
as getting a special magnet that will attract the silver?


Sarah
http://www.SarahBlissArt.com<http://www.sarahblissart.com>



_______________________________________________
FrameWorks mailing list
FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com<mailto:FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com>
https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks
_______________________________________________
FrameWorks mailing list
FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com
https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks

Reply via email to