Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread Dee
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

RE: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread Neville
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread John Popelish
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...!!

RE: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread Neville
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread Da Darrin
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

RE: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread Neville
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-05 Thread John Popelish
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

RE: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-04 Thread Neville
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

CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-03 Thread Debra David
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-10-03 Thread John Popelish
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

RE: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-09-30 Thread Neville
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

CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-09-29 Thread Neville
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-09-29 Thread John Popelish
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

Re: CSSomething interesting for the chemist or physicist?

2014-09-29 Thread yousouf eydatoula
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