James H-McMillan wrote:

> Now that I'm older, here's what I've discovered:
>
> Just a thought I have here. I have no idea of the feasability of it though.
> What if you were to measure the mass of the electrodes before and after
> generation, or posibly the mass of exactly 1 liter of water before and
> after. The difference in mass, all be it, micrograms would be equivalant to
> the ppm? This would only work if the process did not generate enough heat to
>
> drive water off though.
> James Houston-McMillan.

You can measure the mass of the electrodes to determine silver usage, I have
done that as a double check for our ppm measurements.  But you need to either
have a sensitive and accurate instrument, or make a lot of colloidal silver.
When I have done it, I have made 25 gallons.

Measing the mass of the water would not be pratical.  Much more water would
evaporate than silver goes into the water. and if you try to measure a liter of
water, even one drop of error would be more than the amount of silver in it.

Marshall


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