There's a company that has been working since the late '80's experimenting and regulating the amps with the voltage and has come up with a superior CSW generator. It makes sense to me that the smaller the particles, the better health wise. If you can make a generator that makes particles .0008th of a micron, you've got CSW that will get into the smallest capillaries in the body to eliminate stealth diseases. Bigger particles cannot do that. The best CSW that I've seen and have used for years is absolutely clear, not gray or yellow in color. The color tells me the particles are too large to be supremely effective. Anyone can make a simple CSW generator that suspends colloidal silver, but the size of the particles matters greatly. Yes, the homemade generators are effective with some illnesses, but not as many pathogens as the smaller particles can eliminate. S. Spencer Jones, author of the original "The Silver Water Manual," tested hundreds of CSW generators and found one to be superior to the others. And he doesn't work for any of the companies. He seems to know what he's talking about.
John On Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 9:44 AM, Dorothy Fitzpatrick <[email protected]> wrote: > Depends where you're coming from. It is *very* expensive to some, but > peanuts to others. All relative really. dee > On 6 Sep 2009, at 14:14, John E. Stevens wrote: > > $159.00 is not expensive... > > On Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 7:59 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: > >> In a message dated 9/6/2009 6:24:16 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, >> [email protected] writes: >> >> I sugg >> >>

