I meant to add that for 1 liter of water, 40 ppm is 40 mg. For 4 ounces
of water that would be 4.8 mg.

-          Steve N

 

From: Norton, Steve [mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2010 6:27 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CS>Electrolyte ratios and amounts

 

The molecular weight of silver is 107.9.

The molecular weight of citric acid is 192.1.

Silver citrate is basically one molecule of citric acid bonded to three
silver ions and has a molecular weight of 512.7.

 

So, if you have 10 ppm ionic silver you would need an amount of citric
acid equal to 40 ppm  in the same volume of solution. In other words, an
amount smaller than you can measure for all practical purposes.

 

-          Steve N

 

 

From: Garrick [mailto:zzen...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2010 4:27 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>Electrolyte ratios and amounts

 


It would be great if Marshall or anyone could give us a
calculation....How much citric acid to add to say 4oz of 10uS colloidal
silver. Obviously citric acid is very common. I have some in my
refrigerator. Citric acid is cheap. I got mine on ebay.

One test would be when you are sick with a cold or flu. Try the
citric/CS and see what it does

garrick