If you carry 5 gallon buckets of gas and dump them into your tank, you get
a really good feel for how much gas you really burn. I did that for a
couple of years when I drove a tanker semi during the gas crisis. Well,
even though the gas was free, it was a real eye opener.
Even more so for hand cr
Ken,
There is so much room in our world for appropriate technology and you
are taking this thread in a fascinsting direction. Another highly
simple solution that ocurrs to me is to actually peddle the bicycle that
goes along with the generator, since not everybody has the wind to
operate a windmil
ey are AC devices.
>--Steve
>- Original Message -
>From: "Ode Coyote"
>To:
>Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 6:45 AM
>Subject: Re: CS>RE: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
>
>
>> Way cool!
>> Using the gooseneck and an extension with a vane on the back
generator and
put them in series to get your 12 volts. The direction of rotation of a
bike generator makes no difference since they are AC devices.
--Steve
- Original Message -
From: "Ode Coyote"
To:
Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 6:45 AM
Subject: Re: CS>RE: a reason to
Put a tail on it, like on a windmill, which it is.
James-Osbourne: Holmes
-Original Message-
From: Dean T. Miller [mailto:dtmil...@midiowa.net]
Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 2:07 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>RE: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
On Sat, 08 Dec 2001 09:47
Hi Ken
The bike generators have permanent magnets fields so just changing the wires on
the one that run backwards will work.
"Ole Bob"
Ode Coyote wrote:
> Way cool!
> Using the gooseneck and an extension with a vane on the back keeps the
> wheel turned into the wind. Bending the fork assemble
Way cool!
Using the gooseneck and an extension with a vane on the back keeps the
wheel turned into the wind. Bending the fork assembley to get rid of the
rake angle so the pivot is in line with the axle helps. [grunt]
Nice thing about the bike generator is that it's made to clamp onto the
forks
On Sat, 08 Dec 2001 09:47:49 -0500, Ode Coyote
wrote:
> Has anyone ever thought to take an old bicycle wheel, front forks, bike
>light generator and some plastic jug slices for wind vanes in the spokes to
>make a wind generator out of it?
Yup. Only I used slats from an old venetian blind (cut to
Leacy,
You make some quite valid points in your response, however I stand by
portions of my reply to what you said. I think that to utter two words
only, 'double yuck,' on a matter of such serious importance is not
altogether responsible. Without any additional explanation from you,
the matter si
>We located a jewelers supplier that sells .999 silver, processed in
>Switzerland, and finally found someone in the market who could roll this
>into the size strips we need.
## I suspect that bullion coins hammered out or left untouched would do
to eliminate the need for Swiss jewlers.
And af
Dear Ken,
Of course, you are right that in lots of places making CS is do-able,
but I'll give you an example of just how tough it is here in
Bangladesh. I mentioned that several of us are putting together
generators based on Terry Chamberlain's design (BTW Terry, I hope you're
better!!) It's take
Reid,
Wow, what pops in my mind is the word "nonsequitur". I merely said
"DOUBLE YUCK!". You don't know me or my history, and you most certainly
know nothing about what I have been through and survived in my life.
Therefore, it is ridiculous on your part to assume how I would react to
poor peopl
I'll bet that every village has at least one motor vehicle with a
battery. Even a marginal junk battery that won't start a car or motor bike
will do.
Solar distillers, rain/dew collectors and the like are dirt cheap to build
out of junk, if not absolutely free. The only expense would be the sil
Hi Reid,
Some time ago the technical source of light adsorption by particle size was
cited on this list and as Marshall of Roger pointed out the the T.E. is
affected to the first power by the concentartion and the brightness to the
thrid power of the particle size. Alos the color adsorption that h
- Original Message -
From: Reid Harvey
To: silver list
Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 8:22 AM
Subject: CS>Re: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
> Dear Ken,
> In the U.S. and Europe there is superb infrastructure (good roads,
> working phones, etc.) educated people, and vibrant m
Dear Ken,
In the U.S. and Europe there is superb infrastructure (good roads,
working phones, etc.) educated people, and vibrant markets. But in less
developed countries all of these things are lacking. Stand back and try
to imagine a completely different economy. None of the resources you're
talk
I fail to see how buying any commercial CS at any price could be cheaper
than a couple of silver wires , a handful of batteries or the neighbors car
and a few cups of rain water or dew when the only real expense is the
silver at $6 an oz and one ounce makes many many gallons of CS.
Ken
At 08:24
Leacy,
I am sorry to say that it appears that you have a very definite bias, if
not prejudice. It is a great shame that something as beneficial as this
concnetrated CS should elicit such a response. Shame on you. As I have
said, the appearance of this material in photos cannot capture its
appear
bject: CS>Re: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
>
>
> Dear Kevin,
> Thanks for your observations. While it is true that we have
> in the past
> applied silver nitrate to the candles, PRIOR to an additional
> oxidation
> firing, the process for application of CS does NOT involve a
ng
to Mark Metcalf approximately 15 times less effective than for pure CS
(presumably with particle sizes equal).
regards, Kevin Nolan ken...@o-ptusnet.com.au
- Original Message -
From: "Reid Harvey"
To: "silver list"
Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 1:42 PM
Subjec
DOUBLE YUCK!!
>
> Yuck! I wouldn't drink that no matter how much it was diluted.
>
Leacy
Life is Good!
GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!
Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!
Join Juno today! For your FREE software, v
Dear Kevin,
Thanks for your observations. While it is true that we have in the past
applied silver nitrate to the candles, PRIOR to an additional oxidation
firing, the process for application of CS does NOT involve an additional
firing. So CS is applied after the last firing and before use of the
Ole Bob,
I would like to suggest you do the experiment again, since something
didn't go right for you the first time, data or not. As to proofs I
have another.
First, to reiterate, what some folks here are disparaging as greenish
and turbid, this CSW is in reality neither of these, unless of cour
Kevin,
I ended up sending two messages in response to yours where I did not
intend to do this. I had thought I'd deleted the first, since I
realised that my first P.S. was inaccurate, that CS actually is
particulate.
Reid
--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silv
Nina,
Your concern is quite justifiable. I have taken a magnifying glass to
one of the little bottles of the Biopur, and this is what it has to say:
FORMULA: Agua destilada, proteina y plata coloidal estable al 0,15%
Bye for now.
Reid
Nina Silver wrote:
Thank you, Julie, for your willingness to
Hi Again Reid.
I just revisited the eductate-yourself.org web site and there in nothing new
that I have done 3 to 4 years ago
I have the data plots to prove it.
"Ole Bob"
--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
To join or quit silver-list or silver-
Hi Reid,
I just noticed something in your post. My polarity switching was at one
minute intervals. During the investigation I use 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 90
seconds.
Been there and done that.
"Ole Bob"
--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
To join or qui
In article <008e01c17d31$ec3a5580$e8151...@najy4mog5vb3o0>,
"Kevin Nolan" wrote:
>Looking at the image of a beaker of CS on their web page
>http://educate-yourself.org/products.html, seems to me to be a turbid
>product with a greenish tinge - indicative of a fairly low quality, coarse
>particle pr
ilver list"
> Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2001 11:11 PM
> Subject: CS>Re: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
>
> > John,
> > No, concentrated CS can easily be the eloctrolysis variety. Actually I
> > make it myself, purchsed for saturating water filters, ingesti
Hi Reid,
Go back in the archives!!! I introduced and sold polarity reversal units
several years ago. At that time it was a constant voltage generator, all
electronic.
To do it with constant current I would have to use a relay for the switch.
What are you using, constant voltage or current? I wil
...@optusnet.com.au
- Original Message -
From: "Reid Harvey"
To: "silver list"
Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2001 11:11 PM
Subject: CS>Re: a reason to buy 400ppm CS
> John,
> No, concentrated CS can easily be the eloctrolysis variety. Actually I
> make it mysel
Ole Bob,
With all due respects for your great contribution to the understanding
of CS, you are wrong on this question. There are several good reasons
that I know the concentrated CS we use is not the nitrate. Firstly, I
make this myself using only the de-ionized water and the silver rods.
There is
John,
No, concentrated CS can easily be the eloctrolysis variety. Actually I
make it myself, purchsed for saturating water filters, ingesting. But
upto the immenent point of making the 10ppm CS, after Terry
Chamberlain's generator design, my family has been ingesting the ~170ppm
CS, with excella
33 matches
Mail list logo