Dan, I use about 3-4 drops of 35% food grade in a litre of 20-30 ppm CS. Is
this ok. from my understanding I thought it was.
e.
From: Dan Nave <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: CS>Various posts
Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2005 20:35:39 -0600
I believe that the thrust of the previous posts indicated that H2O2 was
being added in very small amounts to catalyze a reaction whereby the
agglomerated clumps of silver (yellow CS) would be broken up into very
small particles perhaps as small as 2 atoms each. The point was to add as
little as possible, just enough to clear the CS. This was said to be about
1 drop for 2 ounces of CS or about 4 or 5 drops to a cup of CS. This
definitely refers to drops of 3.5% H2O2. This is straight 3.5% peroxide
which is normally bought off the shelf in the drug store.
If you want to do this same thing with the 35% food grade peroxide then it
must first be diluted with distilled water before adding the drops in this
proportion.
Using 5 drops of 35% Food Grade peroxide means that you are using 10 times
the recommended amount (for this purpose). Of course, using CS with higher
doses of H2O2 is apparently a valid way of increasing the effectiveness of
CS in some cases.
The point is that these are two *different* ways of using H2O2 with CS.
Dan
Subject:CS>Various posts
From:Terry Chamberlin <[email protected]>
Date:Wed, 21 Dec 2005 17:51:43 -0500 (EST)
To:[email protected]
Jim said,
Can someone clarify for me the concentration of H2O2
to use when putting 2 drops in 8 ounces. Should it be
3.5% or 35%."
If using 35% Food Grade, I use 5 drops in 6-8 oz/CS.
More H2O2 than that and I feel nauseated. But 5 drops
is very effective. Many folks use 10 or more drops per
8 oz/CS, but I cant handle it. With 3%, you would
need to use teaspoons of it to equal the 35%.
As far as the cost of H2O2, I pay $23 per gallon for
35% Food Grade (here in Canada). If I diluted it to 3%
to approximate the pharmaceutical strength, I would
end up with 12 gallons of 3%. Thats $1.92 per gallon,
or about 48 cents per pint (500 ml). The 3% in the
store costs $1.50 per 450 ml (just less than a pint).
Plus, I dont trust the other ingredients in the
pharmaceutical stuff.
Terry Chamberlin
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