Ions are in solution and are all that registers on a meter.
Cold water has a lower saturation point to maintain a solution..ions go colloidal and don't register on a meter. If those colloidal "particles" are still very very small, even a laser won't show them as TE.
The silver is still there.

PPM meters don't measure PPM...and all you have is a good guess under certain conditions based on conductivity
 Temperature is one of those conditions.

Ode



At 11:13 AM 1/22/2010 +0000, you wrote:
I actually wanted to post a question about this and this is that my SilverPuppy always made the ppm at approximately 7 on the TDS meter which I took to be about 14ppm. This used to go down to 10. Now it goes right down to 3 after a couple of days. Any ideas? I am a bit wary of letting the machine run as it takes about five hours to do in this cold weather, and I have had it go yellow when I've left it longer. This may have been coincidence though. dee


On 21 Jan 2010, at 21:47, <mailto:martsmai...@aol.com>martsmai...@aol.com wrote:

No, my machine shuts off at 5ppm

In a message dated 1/21/2010 3:01:52 P.M. Central Standard Time, <mailto:marmar...@bellsouth.net>marmar...@bellsouth.net writes:
Probably. I'm not anal about my ppm-level, and whatever I use works. I usually produce around 10 ppms, but the ppm-level has a tendency to drop off a bit over time. So -- newly made CS would be higher, CS a week or so old would be lower. Just curious -- can't you make a higher ppm?
MA



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