my arm really hard I can just
manage to touch the bottom rung of that knowledge ladder g.
From: one.red...@hotmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2014 11:08:08 +1030
Subject: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
milky with extremely strong TE
Cause and effect Dee, cause and effect, it's a matter of finding the cause in
this instance g. If nothing else maybe I will learn something at the end of
the day?
Subject: Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
From: d...@deetroy.org
Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2014 08:36:38 +0100
On 10/04/2014 10:03 PM, Neville wrote:
Just a quick update on this. I decanted and cleaned that
container out *again* several days ago before returning
the solution to the container. Now here it is several
days later and that spot is reappearing - yet again! This
is truly bizarre? BUT...!!
Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2014 09:59:43 -0400
From: jpopel...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
On 10/04/2014 10:03 PM, Neville wrote:
I don't have any knowledge of the chemistry of litmus paper
with silver water
Neville
So can coffee filters. Have you ever checked the process of making paper?
Dave
On Sun, Oct 5, 2014 at 2:28 PM, Neville one.red...@hotmail.com wrote:
Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2014 09:59:43 -0400
From: jpopel...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSSomething interesting
the need to do anything else to, or with it.
Thanks for that Dave.
Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2014 18:54:49 -0700
Subject: Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
From: ddarrin...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Neville
So can coffee filters. Have you ever checked the process of making
On 10/05/2014 11:05 PM, Neville wrote:
Good grief, I just looked at one list and that list of chemicals is almost as
long as my arm! I knew there was a form of salt involved in the process, but
never knew much else of which went into the process.
It just reinforces my own self set ideals and
interesting for the chemist or physicist?
milky with extremely strong TE, and the storage vessel had a dark spot in the
centre on the bottom.
I decanted solution through a coffee filter {which I have never had the need to
do before, and as it turns out didn't need to this time as nothing was left
On 30/09/2014 8:04 PM, silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com wrote:
Subject:
Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
From:
yousouf eydatoula ey...@yahoo.com
I am also not
familiar with the units KCL uS. I have a meter that reads
out microsiemens per centimeter (uS/cm).
uS
On 10/03/2014 04:43 AM, Debra David wrote:
uS is microsiemens, .. a measurement of the conductivity of
the water. KCL is potassium chloride (a calibration
adjustment) but its actually irrelevant when measuring
conductivity because conductivity is just a unit of
measurement, like a volt or an
Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 21:47:51 -0400
From: jpopel...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?
I'm finding your experience very interesting, though I don't
yet have any answers for you. I am suspecting that some
trace
As you all know, I've been making this stuff for a number of years now but
discovered something 'out of the box' the other day.
On inspecting a stored batch I found it milky with extremely strong TE, and the
storage vessel had a dark spot in the centre on the bottom. Obviously much
more
I'm finding your experience very interesting, though I don't
yet have any answers for you. I am suspecting that some
trace of salt or other chloride contaminated your solution,
but I don't have any explanation for the location of the
deposit. Silver chloride is a white, insoluble substance.
It is
i think that most probably the dark spot was just a thin layer of silver oxide.
CS is not intended to be stored for long periods. light catalyzes the
oxidation, this being the reason why CS is to be kept in a dark place. 1 month
is quite a long time. the oxidation is why your electrodes
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