The first samples I ever had tested went to:
North Carolina State Department of Natural Resources Water Laboratory.
[Half the building is a sign the taxpayers bought]
All they do is test water for the state..that's IT.
They sent back an average of three runs using large samples that ranged
Thanks, Ode.
I kind of had that impression myself, just from what I've read.
Frank himself makes a very convincing case.
Cheers,
indi
On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 05:06:43AM -0500, Ode Coyote wrote:
>
>
> Frank Keys Colloidal Sciences lab is the only lab I've found that has
> any idea what they're
Thanks, Mike.
I will give it a shot.
Cheers,
indi
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 10:00:09PM +, M. G. Devour wrote:
> Hi Indi,
>
> > Do you know of any labs that have affordable rates for that sort of
> > thing? I would love to get a lab report on what I'm producing.
>
> I literally picked up the
Thamks Mike and Ode I will check locally for lab and get back to you Ted
--- On Mon, 12/15/08, Ode Coyote wrote:
From: Ode Coyote
Subject: Re: CS>testimony of nutronix silver ceo
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Monday, December 15, 2008, 4:28 AM
Find a lab that has a fl
Find a lab that has a flame spectrophotometer and knows how to use it.
The Hach Colorometer [like Ole Bob had] works pretty well
Titration processes normally used in water analysis are wildly inaccurate
at 10 PPM.
Ode
At 10:15 PM 12/14/2008 +0005, you wrote:
> Hi Mike ,What ppm di
>
>
>Frank Keys Colloidal Sciences lab is the only lab I've found that has
>
> any idea what they're looking at or how to look at it properly with the
> right tools.
>
> Ode
Good, I'm glad to hear they're still doing that. It's a good option.
Mike D.
>
> At 11:47 AM 12/11/2008 -0500,
> Hi Mike , What ppm did your samples come back at thanks Ted
Lordy, Ted, that was years ago and the process I used then bears no
resemblance to what we do today. I think they were in the mid 20's, but
the brew was made with heated water and was the color of ale! Nor do I
remember what process
Frank Keys Colloidal Sciences lab is the only lab I've found that has
any idea what they're looking at or how to look at it properly with the
right tools.
Ode
At 11:47 AM 12/11/2008 -0500, you wrote:
Do you know of any labs that have affordable rates for that sort of thing?
I would lov
Hi Mike , What ppm did your samples come back at thanks Ted
--- On Thu, 12/11/08, M. G. Devour wrote:
From: M. G. Devour
Subject: Re: CS>testimony of nutronix silver ceo
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Thursday, December 11, 2008, 2:00 PM
Hi Indi,
> Do you know of any labs tha
Hi Indi,
> Do you know of any labs that have affordable rates for that sort of
> thing? I would love to get a lab report on what I'm producing.
I literally picked up the Yellow pages and found an environmental
testing service lab a few miles from here. Dropped my samples off and
received the re
Do you know of any labs that have affordable rates for that sort of thing?
I would love to get a lab report on what I'm producing.
Thanks,
indi
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 12:42:38AM +, M. G. Devour wrote:
>
> There are also other ways to measure silver concentration with fair
> accuracy, I th
> I will use Faraday's law to calculate, but first I need to rig
> a high voltage probe setup for my multimeter to really know how much
> current is passing through the brew, and monitor that over the entire
> 16-18 hour brew time to learn actual average current used.
There are also other ways to
On Tue, Dec 09, 2008 at 08:42:19PM -0600, Clayton Family wrote:
> http://healthyagain.biz/testimony.htm
>
> I was reading under the technology heading, where he is discussing his
> HVAC process, and he says it is not ionic. I'm thinking of you, indi,
> since you like the HV method. I am not too
http://healthyagain.biz/testimony.htm
I was reading under the technology heading, where he is discussing his
HVAC process, and he says it is not ionic. I'm thinking of you, indi,
since you like the HV method. I am not too sure about the process, do
not understand how it could not be ionic or a
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