Chuck,

I am curious as to what it is about my post that your so strenuously object
to?  Did you read the entire thread?
Best Regards,
Arnold Beland

----- Original Message -----
From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, June 08, 2002 10:17 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Re CS > Strange phenomena


> No,No,No,NO!
> Use a 1000 ohm resistor in series with one lead, and measure the VOLTAGE
across
> it. As per ohms' law the reading will directly interpret as milliamps.
> No additional current is contributed to the circuit.
>
> Chuck
> Nurse: "Doctor, the man you just gave a clean bill of health to dropped
dead
> right as he was leaving the office".
>  Doctor: "Turn him around, make it look like he was walking in."
>
> On Sat, 8 Jun 2002 14:10:10 -0400, "Arnold Beland"
<[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >If you are using a multimeter on the ohms range to measure the
conductivity
> >of your solution you may be putting yourself in harms way.  These meters
use
> >a DC source voltage for resistance measurements, usually a 9 volt
battery.
> >This is enough voltage to start the process of electrolysis from one
probe
> >to the other.  I believe that most of these probes are nickel plated.
> >Nickel ions are very bad for you.  A proper conductivity meter uses a
> >relatively low AC voltage at 400 cycles ore more to eliminate the very
> >phenomena.
> >Best Regards,
> >Arnold Beland
>
>
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