... I second that, Marshall... hundreds of gallons of EIS using reverse 
polarity, producing nothing but a high quality product.

~Jason

----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Marshall 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 10, 2012 15:44
  Subject: Re: CS>Beck blood purifier


  Reversing polarity of the electrodes while making CS is an effective and 
widely used method of decreasing buildup of silver and oxides of silver on the 
electrodes.  I have made thousands of gallons of CS, and I reverse every 
minute, on a two minute cycle.  Reversing eliminates the dark oxides because 
the electrode which forms the oxide is exposed to monoatomic hydrogen during 
the next half cycle, and the hydrogen immediately reacts with the oxide 
reducing the silver oxide to silver.  Also any silver powder that accumulates 
on an electrode, either by reduction of silver oxide, or by deposition of 
silver from the solution, goes back out on the next half cycle as well.  The 
result is electrodes which stay amazingly clean and never need to be cleaned.  
I can typically make several thousand gallons of CS on a set of electrodes and 
have never ever had to clean them.

  Also I have never witnessed any silver oxide coming loose due to polarity 
switching.  If any were to come loose it would be from the stirring of the 
water, not a polarity switch.

  Marshall

  On 10/10/2012 6:31 PM, D B wrote: 
    The idea of reversing polarity during the manufacturing process is a very 
bad idea and obvious design flaw. Far better to select one electrode, and make 
a mark at the top with a pair of pliers, then simply connect it to positive one 
run , then negative the next, keeping note of dates you use the marked 
electrode with neg or pos current.  


    The reason for this is that you will accrue a large amount of dark oxides 
which should not be disturbed during manufacturing. If they get into the sol 
(colloid) then the ions coming of the electrode will then stick to those chunks 
and your sol will bottom out much quicker, the particles also being less 
therapeutically beneficial as they will be getting so large to the point where 
they will just not be able to pass inside cell tissue and kill pathogens, also 
creating more possibility of argyria skin discolouration, though that can be 
lessened or even removed with selenium supplementation to chelate it from the 
skin I read. The regular changing of polarity will just push a load of muck 
into the distilled water and act as a magnet for the smaller groups of ions to 
stick to. 


    With best wishes, Dave


    On Sun, Oct 7, 2012 at 1:32 AM, HARSHA GODAVARI <[email protected]> wrote:

      I am considering using this to make colloidal silver. I like the idea of 
reversing polarity because it will slow down a build_up of CS near one 
electrode and both electrodes (hopefully) wear evenly. Also I have one of these 
around and it will save a bit for the time being :-)

      Are there any "cons (& pros)" to this notion. I would appreciate your 
thoughts on this. Thank you.

      regards
      hg





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