Simon Jester wrote:
On 11/5/2007, Marshall Dudley (mdud...@king-cart.com) wrote:
I suspect that ozonated water will react the same with with CS that
H2O2 does. They both have an unstable oxygen attached. Basically it
will oxidize the colloidal particles producing silver oxide and
silver hydroxide, and then oxidize the silver oxide making two atom
silver colloid (and an O2 molecule). The reason that the
conductivity went down is because much of the silver oxide, which is
ionic, became a colloid with the second reaction.
I prefer not to speculate... or to make things unnecessarily
complicated. I just don't see a good reason to ozonate CS. If it is
ever proven to somehow increase its potency or have some other
beneficial effect, then by all means, lets shout it to the rooftops.
Well, it might break the particles down like H2O2 does, and there is
some evidence it does. It is known that if this is done, potency
increases. And work by Bob Beck shows that ozone water is effective in
getting to pathogens in areas where CS does not reach. So between those
two, it does increase the effectiveness of just plain old CS.
This is a good topic for experimentation - and I am even very
interested in the results - but only by those capable of determining
exactly what happens (and I'm not)...
Well, unfortunately, most experiments would be of a the nature that it
worked on the flu or cold, and did so better than CS or ozonated water
alone. Difficult to structure so that one can be certain of the results
since it is anecdotal.
Again, maybe it is fine - maybe it even amplifies the CS - maybe it
even produces a hitherto unknown substance that is 5 times more
powerful than CS and ozone combined - but it is just plain silly to
'experiment' like this on your own body without having a damned good
idea what it is actually doing ahead of time.
Well, I have a darned good idea what it does. It either mixes with no
reaction, in which case it should do as well as CS plus Ozonated water
summed together, or it will act like H2O2 and break down the larger
colloidal particles making smaller ones, which would make it better than
the sum of the parts. Neither of those I see has a downside.
This is just one mans opinion... everyone is of course welcome to
experiment in their own way - and welcome to experience the
consequences of their actions, even those taken in ignorance.
I have done the experiments with H2O2. I think it likely that ozonated
water will behave similarly.
Marshall
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