If that's a TDS meter, the actual PPM of "silver water" would be more like 20 PPM and that's about as good as it gets and still stay consistent and repeatable considering all the other variations in environment and water quality.
ie  ...anything over around 20 PPM gets more "iffy", the more over that you go.
Beyond that you find contaminant reaction thresholds that move around a lot and a VERY iffy barrier at 30.

ode

At 03:00 PM 1/23/2010 -0600, you wrote:
Ode, what is your recommendation for testing your CS? I was told 10 ppm was a good one to stay with on a meter sent by Utopia.
Thanks,
Leslie
----- Original Message ----- From: "Dorothy Fitzpatrick" <d...@deetroy.org>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 23, 2010 12:55 PM
Subject: Re: CS>periodontal infected gum disease - now ppm sizes


Thanks Ode. Do you think it will do any good to run the meter on, or is this unnecessary? dee

On 23 Jan 2010, at 15:56, Ode Coyote wrote:



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




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