Nope! Didn't buy em! <g>
Dean

-----Original Message-----
From:   It's not me [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent:   Wednesday, June 24, 1998 8:38 PM
To:     [email protected]
Subject:        Re: Use of H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide)

Dean,
I think that you are getting ripped off on bottles, unless they are half
gallon or gallon size.
Vern

-----Original Message-----
From: Dean Woodward <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>; [email protected]
<[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, June 24, 1998 3:06 PM
Subject: RE: Use of H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide)


>Bob and All: I'm glad to hear about the barrier bottle, as I have been
using
>them to store my CS. I reasoned that anything that could store h202 would
>probably be good for CS. My ppm of cs seems to hold fairly steady in the
>bottle. Even to buy them, pour out the h2o2 would be cost effective
>(Containers Inc. are quoting cobalt blue bottles for $2.90 EACH).
>
>I have had good success at controlling periodontal disease with very dilute
>h2o2 solution (half 3%/half water) used before bed at night as a mouth wash
>(not rinsed afterward). However. Cs does a far better job for me. No pink
>tooth brush since I started using CS as a rinse a couple of months ago.
Good
>stuff!
>
>Dean Woodward
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Tai-Pan [mailto:[email protected]]
>Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 1998 2:32 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: Use of H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide)
>
>Douglas Haack wrote:
>>
>> I understand that the 32% H2O2 is sprayed onto the flat packaging
>> materials used for those small popper drink containers prior to final
>> fabrication and filling with liquids.
>>
>> These appear to be fabricated from heavy card board lined with alu foil
>> and this foil is lined with a plastic.
>>
>> The drink packaging plant people seem to be the users according to my
>> enquiries here in Sydney
>>
>> Douglas Haack
> Hi Douglas and list,
>  Thats a very interesting use of H2O2. Hydrogen Peroxide comes in many
>concentrations. At 90% it will decompose rapidly on contact with lots of
>things ( boom,bang). At 32% it will decompose a little more slowly, not
>explosively but still very vigorous. Aluminum and plastics are known to
>have oily surfaces and require cleaning. Oil is organic and the H2O2
>will clean the surface,decomposing as it does into water and oxygen. The
>oxygen vaporizes away and the water is dried off leaveing a clean
>surface for placing the plastic layer on the aluminum. They would clean
>the plastic surface the same way before folding it into a box for
>filling. This is industrial strength and must be handled carefully, it
>will quickly eat the skin off of you or eat any organic thing it can. At
>3% its very safe ,mild, and non-toxic. Its so mild you can buy it in any
>store for 38 cents a bottle.When they say its a mild anti-septic, thats
>exactly right, won`t hardly hurt a flea. The 3% concentration will
>decompose in a few seconds on contact will organic materials as a
>foaming bubbly cleanser. Most people use it to bleach hair because it is
>so mild. It is used to loosen dried stuck bandages from wounds because
>it is so mild and will not harm the tissue. Because of this usage people
>thought it was being used to disinfect the wound,while in reality it was
>just to get the dried bandage off. Hydrogen Peroxide is thermally
>unstable because its formation is a highly endo-thermic process. In
>order to store it ,it must be stabilized with small amounts of a
>negative catalyst (stabilizer)such as acetanilide. Heavy metals (copper,
>silver) will hasten the decomposition into water and oxygen. Storage is
>in special bottles called *barrier* bottles. Go get your Hydrogen
>Peroxide from your bathroom and look at the bottle. Its a very dark
>brown strange feeling plastic bottle. In this bottle it will keep about
>two years (they have dates on them, usually on the cap). It will self
>decompose by itself anyway over a few years however hard we want it not
>to. By the way ,if you have an empty barrier bottle its a great way to
>store your CS. Barrier bottles are not permeable like regular plastic
>bottles. They aren`t good from a marketing stand point because they are
>so ugly (the bottles that is).
> I`m glad a lot of people are looking into uses for this very useful
>compound.:-)
> The government says its ok because its so safe,its so mild,even the
>kids can play with it (at 3%).
>
> Bless you   Bob  Lee
>--
>oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
>  [email protected]
>
>
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To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
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To post, address your message to: [email protected]

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>