Dan

You seem to know your way around Faraday calculations. What would you roughly estimate the ppm to be if you ran a basic uncontrolled '3 nines' system in a glass of typical tap water (maybe with a pinch of salt added) for say 5 minutes?

David


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Subject:
Re: CS>The blue man
From:
Dan Nave <na...@comcast.net>
Date:
Fri, 21 Dec 2007 21:07:15 -0600
To:
silver-list@eskimo.com

To:
silver-list@eskimo.com


Actually, my experiments show that you can get pretty repeatable ppms in tap water if you monitor the current and use the Faraday calculations the first time. The brew time will be very short compared to using distilled water and current control at 1ma. (On the order of 1 to 5 minutes in a glass of water, if I remember correctly.) Conduction rates will not "run away" because the initial conduction is very high and won't appreciably increase before you get the appropriate amount of silver into the water. Still, you will get silver compounds, I expect. And if you don't measure and calculate first, you could get extreme amounts of silver in your product.

Many people are very naive. And some don't wish to think clearly about anything, so they will get themselves into trouble, one way or another.

Dan