Nothing wrong with battery units.  *All* generators have a use just as *all* 
solutions or suspensions have a use, one just needs to know when to use a 
battery one and how/why and in what circumstance one would use it, that's 
something this 'one' decides.

 

Sorry Dave but must support the grass roots of the industry, not polite to turn 
ones back on ones roots.  It's not all about the 'teeniest weeniest itty bitty' 
particles in 'crystal clear mountain glacier' water, there's far more to it 
than that for me which is why I must defend the little beggars...for all their 
rudimentary crudeness.

 

N.
 


Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2009 21:07:17 -0700
Subject: Re: CS>Testing....
From: davedar...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com

I used 20 ppm approx. for my battle with Lyme. The colloid master Model 777 
www.wishgranted.com makes a gallon at a time with a sun tea jar using two maple 
leaves hung in the water with flat straps so they stay straight with each 
other,you can decant from the spigot without filtering.
No stirring needed as the polarity is reversed every 55 seconds. 
No hassle to that arrangement.
I wouldn't have anything else. Of course I don't get any kicks out of sitting 
in the middle of my lawn and watching the grass grow either. That is about what 
you get with the battery arrangements.
Dave


On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 8:37 PM, MaryAnn Helland <marmar...@bellsouth.net> 
wrote:




Hi Mike.  I think that most people aim for a ppm-level of around 10.  We are 
happy with anything in the range from as low as 5 ppms to as high as 20 ppms.  
Mine is rarely higher than 14 or 15.  No -- most of us aren't guessing -- we're 
using a tester of some sort.  Mine is a Hanna tester (available from 
www.wishgranted.com).  You simply dip the end of the unit into your silver 
solution and it gives a digital readout of the approximate ppm level.  Yes -- 
approximate.  This tester isn't designed to measure ppms of silver -- there 
actually isn't any unit designed to do that -- but this comes pretty darn close 
for a reasonable price.  I think I paid $55.00 for mine.  Plus shipping.  
Incidentally -- there are proponents of the theory that the lower ppm-level CS 
is as effective, or more effective than the higher ppm-level CS.  IOW -- 5 ppms 
are just fine.  Quality control is mostly visual -- if you process it 
correctly, and your tester gives you a reading of between 5 and 20 ppms, and 
your product is perfectly clear, then you have good quality Colloidal Silver.  
Or, Electrically Isolated Silver, as we like to call it here.  Hope this helps. 
 MA


On 8/19/2009 9:55:16 PM, luv2h...@optonline.net wrote:


> I've now read a number of posts regarding how much and how often folks take 
> CS in the attempt to treat Lyme. However, no posts have actually spoke to the 
> strength of the solution, which to me seems to be a very important variable. 
> For instance, one teaspoon of a 5000 ppm solution is a heck of a lot more 
> silver than 1 gallon of a 1 ppm solution.  I mean, for you folks out there 
> making your own silver solutions....do you have any idea how strong it is, or 
> are you just guessing? If you do, what do you use for quality control?
> 
> Mike


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