Re: CSkefir
2012/8/5 Kathy Tankersley babychicks...@gmail.com ** Hi, anoe know anything about kefir? Do you take it, how do you make it?, Good purchase place? Thanks for the info, Kathy Great stuff ! I make kefir of milk for many years and it is a wonderful home made fermentation. There is also kefir of water that it is with water and brown sugar. I also made it in the past but had to stop as we can not drink it all as the production grows very fast. One can do kefir of water with juices. Also do consider reseach about kombucha, one other home made fermentation...
Re: CS
2012/6/11 Bob Smith rresm...@q.com ** Does anyone know of an alternative protocol for Crohns? Bob Smith Research about kefir of milk and kefir of water and kombucha. Use raw milk and fluoride free watter...
Re: CSOT - black salve
2012/6/6 Dorothy Fitzpatrick d...@deetroy.org can anyone give me a tip on how to get this to stick on the target please? it just seems to roll off at the moment. All help appreciated. dee http://www.panaceauniversity.org/courses.htm The first course
Re: CSKeeping the same polarity rods
2012/5/13 Mike Monett mrmon...@pstca.com The gray whiskers that form on the cathode are pure silver. They are silver ions from the anode, or positive electrode. They have accepted an electron from the cathode to become a neutral silver atom. What happens next depends on the current density. At very low current, such as used in the SilverCell process, the silver forms a fuzz around the electrode and grows tiny whiskers at the bottom. At higher currents, a silver sludge forms at the bottom of the U, assuming you are using a U-shape electrode. At higher currents, such as most cs generators use, the ion density is high enough for silver hydroxide to form in the thin Nernst Diffusion layer next to the cathode. Thinking about squared rods of silver with 3mm wide, emerged about 7cm in the solution. 1) What is considered small and large electric current ? 2) The yellowish color of the solution is a good or bad indication ? 3) Using a green laser i can see a kind of faint cloud or a cloud filament spreading from the anode (-). Assuming that this can act as a kind of 'short circuit' i stir the solution, witch results at diminish of the electric current. As we prefer lower currents. All this make sense ? Thanks.
Re: CSKeeping the same polarity rods
2012/5/8 Neville Munn one.red...@hotmail.com Well, here's another take on it. And I don't mean to tread on anyones toes, just stating my opinion. I personally don't subscribe to the reverse polarity business. It's fine for those who prefer to set and forget, but every time that polarity is automatically reversed, whatever hydroxides blah blah that appears on the electrode will be removed {blown off} from that electrode - and where does that stuff end up? it remains in the water, in whatever form, and probly ends up laying on the surface of the water or on the bottom of the storage vessel which means one will have to either decant or filter it out. If I'm wrong here, then I am sure someone will state as much quick enough, but then that's why we are here is it not - opinion exchange. Appreciate the opinions here... I have been brewing with 0.5 at the beginning until to 3 mA after about 80 minutes continuously . To keep below 3 mA at the end it requires vigorous agitation of the solution. This is by seeding the distiled water with a little of the previous batch of CS. My opinion is that it is good to have a large surface contact of the silver rods with the water. The anode looses metal to the solution so its surface becomes rough. So after a number of runs it would be useful to switch polarities the have both electrodes with similar surface area and consequently same electrochemical behavior. Comments ?
Re: CSDilution of CS
2012/4/26 Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.net It's not just amps. It's amps over a surface area over a period of time. 3 interdependent factors with 2 constantly changing variables and an equation to handle them. Thank goodness for computers. The color of the solution can be used to estimate ppm. A laser also can offer some indication... Anyway, could you point the site where one can see this equation ? Thanks.
Re: CSDilution of CS
2012/4/24 Dan Nave bhangcha...@gmail.com How much water is in your vessel? About 750 ml What is the average current during the one hour? (Average it out.) With no seed solution it starts about 40 mA and after one hour 1.3 mA. The current is maintained always below 2 mA by solution agitation. TTS.
Re: CSDilution of CS
2012/4/25 Dan Nave bhangcha...@gmail.com Assuming that your current increases in a linear manner from .040 ma at start to 1.3 ma after 1 hour (avg of .67 ma over 1 hour), and 750ml water volume, the Faraday Calculator shows that you should have a maximum concentration of 3.6 ppm of silver. Not concentrated enough to dilute, barely adequate for use as it is. You should probably run this for another hour to get a higher concentration. OK. Them if one uses amps as a measure of ppm, what is the range of current to produce a good therapeutic solution ? TTS.