Thomas the doubter wonders about the following. The density of silver is 10.5 g/cc The density of water is 1 g/cc This means that if I had a triple beam scale that measures 1000 grams, two identical volume samples would be too imperceptible to measure, between 15 ppm and ordinary distilled. Equal volumes of 1000 grams would only show a barely detectable .015 grams differerence if my math is right.
What about measuring the weight of a substance under the water, what they call a specific gravity? I used to make those kinds of measurements in the plastic industry for materials,as a lab technician, but it was a highly sensitive scale, down to the 10 thousandths of a gram. Undoubtably a scale like that could detect such differences. Has any one actually compared the predictions of ppm to the actual realities of density differences of materials? HDN ===== Tesla Research Group; Pioneering the Applications of Interphasal Resonances http://groups.yahoo.com/group/teslafy/ __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! http://platinum.yahoo.com -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: http://silverlist.org To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>