Well, so much for spell checking.  I apologize for the errors but I'm sure you 
can tell what I meant.

Trem


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Trem 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2011 6:44 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>The Silvercell process?


  I guess it's appropriate for me to chime in.  I have made ionic silver as 
high as 50+ PPM using the SG7 as measured with a Hanna PWT meter.  Some is 
stored in glass and some in 2 liter cola bottles.  It was measured at 45+ PPM.  
A couple of them have a slight golden color indicating a small amount of 
agglomeration.

  I use vigorous water movement to avoid what Mike M calls the Nernst layer.  
If it's there it is certainly very thin.

  I check them every couple of years and some have drifted down a small amount. 
 I relate microsiemens directly to PPM, having correlated them many years ago 
by lab analysis.  It tuned out that 1 uS equals 1 PPM.  That's when we started 
sell the meters for use as ionic/colloidal silver PPM meters.

  We distilled our well water using a Barnstead lab still.  As I recall the 
water was under 1 microsiemen.

  There is a minor amount of fallout besides the small drop in PPM.  No 
plateout so we Consider the water as having unlimited shelf life.  It is about 
11 years old now.

  Trem


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: David AuBuchon 
    To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
    Sent: Monday, December 19, 2011 6:12 PM
    Subject: Re: CS>The Silvercell process?


    It could be, though I am also skeptical.  Natural Immunogenics for example 
only has 23PPM with all their years of work.  And that is also suspiciously 
close to one hypothetical upper bound of roughly 26PPM (13PPM silver oxide, 13 
PPM silverhydroxide).  This lends credence to that hypothetical upper bound 
(without using ultra low current density like Mike is doing, that is). 


    How is the 40PPM measured on the SilverGen?  A built in meter?  Short of 
getting a batch lab-analyzed, the correctness and relevance of the reading that 
that meter gives would need to be validated.  The conductance drop over time 
after the batch is finished would also need to be viewed.  Also visible 
plateout or fallout.  Also potential contamination sources.

    David  



    On Fri, Dec 16, 2011 at 5:48 AM, Alan Jones <alanmjo...@gmail.com> wrote:

      Would you mind sharing more details on this?  How small must the batch 
be?  How pure must the water be? 


      -Alan 



      On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 9:18 PM, Alchemysa <da...@alchemysa.com.au> 
wrote: 

        Anyway, I've made 40+ ppm CS with a Silverpuppy in the past. Its not 
that hard. Its just a matter of using very pure water and keeping the batch 
size small.  Trem has also said he's made 40+ with a Silvergen. Mike would 
dispute this of course.

        David


      -- 

      Alan Jones

      "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor 
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to 
the people."  (Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution)