Hi Ian,
Those of us who have already been through what you are going through in terms
of choosing which CS is the best will tell you the same, brew some at home with
care and attention.
The whole setup if done very simple with 3 nine volt batteries and a resister
will cost you the same as one single bottle of commercial CS. And since it will
have ionic and particulate elements will serve to provide you with both and you
ca produce as much as you like then! And also care and share with those around
you.
If you are able, you could change the setup for a 'fancy' current controlled
one with one single ic with three pins that costs under 2 dollars
Or buy one of the excellent units some of our members offer.
Please do not be put off with making your own CS, most commercial stuff will
only be at best as good as your own home made stuff ( if made well).
The tetra silver is one people had reported good results with. Other than that
there's not much to differentiate the others other than marketing and
sometimes misrepresentation of their product.
There's very little difference in genuinely colloidal silver with ionic and
some particulate matter. So there's no need to over analyse the situation.
Best of luck
Peace to all
Asif.
On 28 Jul 2012, at 03:09, Ian MacLeod heyo...@crestviewcable.com wrote:
I've a question I hope someone can answer. One seller of nanosilver, Purest
Colloids. Internet URL is purestcolloids.com, says that theirs is a
better-than-most colloidal silver because their silver particles are smaller,
and there is almost no ionic silver in the solution. They call it
mesosilver because of the process used. They have all sorts of studies
available, plus the make other colloidal suspensions than just silver.
Anyway, some others insist that ionic silver is the part that has the
antibiotic effect. THAT can be made at home, I know, but it's silver
dissolved in solution, it is NOT a colloidal suspension. So which one should
we buy? I'm looking at the added expense of buying one of each and using
both. ONE of them has to be wrong, but which one?
Thanks!
Ian
On 7/27/2012 7:51 AM, silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com wrote: