this has nothing to do with this email, just wanted to thank all of the
people on the list that wrote me and helped with info for my sister who had
lung cancer, she has recently died, but she lived almost 3 years and she was
giving 4 to 6 weeks when they first found the lung cancer, not sure if she
died from the brain cancer that she got in May , she fell and had a very bad
bang and they thought she might have had a brain bleed, but seeing she had
the cancer they did not treat her, again thanks so very much, she was loved
and will be missed by the entire family and we are grateful for the extra
time we had with her
Lynda

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ode Coyote" <coyote...@earthlink.net>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Saturday, November 29, 2003 11:14 AM
Subject: RE: CS>Why the yellow CS - an hypothesis


>
>   Makes sense to me.
>
> On my process, the heat has never exceeded about 98 deg.  The bigger the
> container, the longer the run but , the more head shed from the larger
> surface area.
>  However, preheating will get things going sooner and using thermal
cooling
> for convection toward the end may yeild positive results where excessive
> heat may do some harm.
>  In some cases "excessive" may be a matter of relativity.
>
> Ode
>
> At 10:06 AM 11/26/2003 -0600, you wrote:
> >Ode reminded me of a recent discovery that covering my brew container
> >while I'm making my CS gave me better results: less TE and clearer CS
> >for the same PWT readings in the finished batch.  I have a glass
> >container and put the glass lid on it while brewing.  The silver wires
> >and the stirrer mounts hang over the side and the lid sits on top of the
> >whole thing.  Another thing that helped improve the batch was turning
> >the power off if the batch got warm to the touch and letting it cool.  I
> >use a fan pointed at the container during brewing too.  I brew 2 gallons
> >at about 8 hours per batch (15,000V 30ma) so heat can really build up
> >and cause bigger particles if I let it.
> >
> >Seems covering while brewing and keeping the batch cool is worth a try
> >to reduce the yellow.
> >________________________________________________________________________
> >________________________________________________________________________
> >________
> >Ode wrote:
> >
> > If I recall, Wyoming is the home of the high plateau and northern
> >lights...and also produces high sulpher coal and oil which is burned
> >there
> >to make power.
> > Ozone is made when electromagnetic radiation hits the air.
> > Sulpher will tarnish silver pretty quick. How much does it take?
> > What happens when there is sulpher in the air as ozone is being made?
> > How do distillers get ozone?
> > How readily does atmospheric ozone , with or without a sulpher
> >componant,
> >dissolve into water?
> >
> > I don't know the answers.
> >
> >Ode
> >
> >
> >
> >--
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> >
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> >
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> >
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> >
> >
>
>
>