Here is the technical info I received back from my
email to the site concerning their water ozonator...
Cold-Corona method of ozone generation
ozone output: > 400 mg/h
power supply: two versions, depending on geographic
area:
ac 115v+/-10%, frequency: 50 hz (for US sales)
ac 220v+/-10%, frequ
I have purchase ozonators from Dell Industries for years, they have an
excellent reputation perform ozonating to municiple water supplies as well as
provide the following affordable generators.
http://www.ozonepure.com/
SilverTedEBear wrote:
I'm thinking about buying a water ozonator but mo
I believe that you can trust the people at SOTA Instruments; I do.
Their unit might be the best buy; they have a very liberal upgrade
policy also.
On Thursday, Feb 19, 2004, at 09:40 Asia/Tokyo, SilverTedEBear wrote:
Thanks William,
That's what I was concerned about. I emailed the
Thanks William,
That's what I was concerned about. I emailed the site
and asked if I could get some technical info on it but
haven't received a reply yet. If I do, I will pass on
the info.
Ted
--- "William Meyer calista3-at-earthlink.net
|SilverList|" <0gy7hsvnz...@sneakemail.com> wrote:
> a q
a quick perusal of the link showed no details of the actual ozonator.
if you get details it could be examined. i don't believe there
is a free lunch with such a cheap ozonator. ozone can be produced
with different systems, but they all have strengths and weaknesses.
at this price point i would b
I'm thinking about buying a water ozonator but most of
the ones I've seen are just too expensive for me...
$270 and up... ie: SOTA. After a little research I
came across this unit for $119:
http://www.therabreath.com/products.asp?FID=6&PID=128
Does anyone know anything about this unit or have an
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