On 8 Mar 98 at 2:42, Dameon wrote: > ... Every penny counts, so I await your verdict before spending the > moola [on the ppm meter]
Hi Dameon, I'll give my qualified endorsement right now. Go ahead and buy it! The meter is physically well made. The electronics are stable and give reproduceable readings. The price is great. The *ONLY* thing I don't know yet is whether the calibration for the standard salt solution and various CS preparations will be the same. Once I can directly compare the results from the meter with the testing lab and/or other methods I will know this. We may each have to lab test our product in order to calibrate our meters. Once you have a CS sample of known concentration, you can adjust the meter to give you that value. Then you can make up a salt solution of any reasonable concentration and record the meter reading that it gives you. In the future, you'll only have to measure the salt standard once in a while to make sure the meter hasn't drifted. If you keep the standard in a closed jar it should never change. > By the way, this is the guy with Cystic Fibrosis, in case you've > forgotten. We keep you in our prayers here Dameon. You're not forgotten! > You advised me to get a silver machine from Thomas Miller and it > just arrived yesterday. I haven't used it yet, but it looks as > solid as any I've seen and the price was *very* right. Tom Clayton recommended it and I agreed with him. It's seems to be a basically good design with several advantages. Miller advocates the use of salt and disputes the safety of the "golden" CS that many of us are making. I have a few remarks to make about this, but that's for another post. People have reported plenty of good results with *both* kinds of CS, and neither side has given us enough information to *prove* their criticisms. If you choose to proceed, I suggest you make it according to his directions. Now that you have one you can do a product evaluation for us! <grin> > My disease, at this point, offers no room for error and I feel that > accuracy in my approach to experimentation is important; the lung > infections I'm trying to smash are quite nasty and may need a very > high PPM of silver over a sustained period. Injection is not out of > the question. Your experiments will be fascinating to study. Be certain that you satisfy yourself of the safety of what you're doing and consult with your physician(s) as you deem appropriate. > The bacteria's name is Pseudomonas aeruginosa and is the main > killer of CF victims because of it's voracious nature. > > And then there's staph... forever staph. Reading the above is chilling. Brrrr! Good luck, sir! Mike D. [Mike Devour, Citizen, Patriot, Libertarian] [mdev...@mail.id.net ] [Speaking only for myself... ] -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the subject: line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@id.net>