Ode writes,

In my experience, H2O2 should not be added during the process in any amount.
 I did that once and made copious amounts of shiny silver metal flakes big
enough to use in a snow scene paperweight. Conductivity never exceeded 13
uS after many hours.
..very pretty, but not useful.

Thanks for your response, Ode. Your results from adding H2O2 at the
beginning of a brew does sound ominous.

I did go ahead and make a normal batch and added 20 ml H2O2 during the
32 hour brewing process. Other than the conductivity change, so far up
to 12.78 uS after 5 days, no difference was noticed in the CS. Still
clear and no floating material, just like normal batches.  No H2O2
taste, either.

One obvious benefit: All the gray fuzzy material is gone! My method is
to bang the cathode frequently during brewing, knocking the major mass
of this accumulation into the batch which is then strained through
coffee filters when pouring the finished CS into storage containers.
This time though, only a fraction of the normal amount of gray
material was left in the generator jar at the end of the brew.
Although no filter was used when pouring the CS into a storage
container, there is now no gray stuff anywhere. Sparkle count in the
TE of a shaken container is quite high.

Jimmy Joe

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