This has been the thing for me for ages, and I've pondered this for a while...If particles revert back to ions {which is a question I've asked in the past} when contacting - let's just say what constitutes the 'fluids' within the blood/body - and supposedly ions immediately form compounds thus becoming practically useless when in contact with same according to some, then what happens with the ionic component of Mesosilver {or any other silver solution for that matter} after those same 'fluids' have done the compound conversion, or whatever else they may do to silver? My questions would be: *DO* particles break up and revert back to ions due to the constituents of body fluids acting on them {dare I mention the ammonia hypothesis? Or peroxides within the body? Or acids etc etc} when circulating in the blood stream? Do those ions regain their positive charge *IF* those particles are broken up? Do those ions revert back to single atoms minus that electron? If so, then do they take on a positive charge again? Isn't that what constitutes an ion, an atom which has lost one of its electrons thus giving it a positive electrical charge? Is this possible? I'm not entirely sure anyone knows definitively, but I'd certainly welcome any comment...Or opinion. N.
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2011 19:15:05 -0700 From: craigs...@craigcchamberlin.com To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: CS>44 PPM Hi Bob and Neville, Mesosilver is 80% particles and 20% ionic. The claim to fame is that the particles are very small. I buy it because my wife has such a horrible aversion to my homemade EIS that she just won't drink it. But I cut the Mesosilver with 3 parts distilled water to 1 part Mesosilver. It works just as well as my Puppy made stuff. The last gallon I bought in June was $235 with shipping. She doesn't use the entire gallon in a year, but I try to keep a gallon in reserve. To me Mesosilver has no taste, but she still detects a bit of one. I can taste my Puppy EIS, but it isn't that big of a deal. Its odd because I am the one with an aversion to even picking up a piece of metal and can smell it on my fingers...go figure:) Best Regards, Craig Bob Banever wrote: Neville, But since the ionic content of Mesosilver is almost nonexistant how can the results be attributed to it's ionic content? Particle silver perhaps becomes ionic in the presence of stomach acid? Bob ----- Original Message ----- From: Neville Munn To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 5:56 PM Subject: RE: CS>44 PPM Apologies, I did lose something in translation. I misread it. I read that several times, and only AFTER posting did I get it. The suggestion is that it's NOT the particle content in Mesosilver, but rather the ION content that gets results. Sorry, as you were. N. From: one.red...@hotmail.com To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: RE: CS>44 PPM Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 11:22:54 +1030 Unless I've misread something, all the advertising I've read regarding Mesosilver is that it purports to be high in *particulate* content? Have I lost something in translation? N. From: ja...@eytonsearth.org To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: CS>44 PPM Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2011 16:43:02 -0700 Hi Alan: It's the age old arguement. Frank says that the reason people experience good results with a good quality home brew is the particulate content. The counter-arguement is that the reason people experience results with Mesosilver is its ionic content. Best Regards, Jason ----- Original Message -----