Don't know that it would, if one used a wide container and if the
boiling were vigorous and the steam rose rapidly. . . in shipboard
water distillers sediment rises up and gets into pipes and cruds up the
whole evaporative distillation system so badly that periodic descaling
is necessary. Thus we know that the steam carries up that which is
distilled from the falling pure water. . .
On Tuesday, Sep 16, 2008, at 20:08 Asia/Tokyo, Ode Coyote wrote:
"Distillation" leaves ions and particles as a residue in the
container.
ode
At 08:29 AM 9/16/2008 +0900, you wrote:
And one step further: why not boil EIS in the oven? If vigorously
boiled the steam would carry particles/ions of EIS into all the nooks
and crannies of the oven . . .
On Monday, Sep 15, 2008, at 14:04 Asia/Tokyo, Jonathan B. Britten
wrote:
Just curious, and not quibbling, but given that this group is
devoted to EIS, why not use that? Might it not be less oxidative?
Taking things one step further: mightn't sunlight do the job? If
one can spray something onto the components, sunlight might also
reach them. I have read that 48 hours of sunlight on PET-bottled
water renders it fit to drink -- the poor man's last-ditch water
purification system.
On Saturday, Sep 13, 2008, at 00:05 Asia/Tokyo, Norton, Steve wrote:
Kathryn,
You should consider Malcolms suggestion about using bleach. It is a
great disinfectant and does dissipate leaving no residue. It
generally isn't used for electronics because it is an oxidant and
can corrode metals but if you dry the microwave in a reasonable
time it should be no problem. One approach might be to:
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