PT:  There is no meter available to measure CS strength.  All you learn from a TDS meter is that you have something.   You should have tested your good meter in a sample of distilled water, reading would be 0-1 when you actually do the test.  Its seems you looked at the reading when turning on your meter, and not with a substance in between the test points.  Try testing the distilled water before saying you have a bad meter please.  Your reports on Rife devices have this same flaw in thinking- and your report they have a problem when in essence they don't.  To make sure you understand, you need to send your product to a lab that does measure the strength of what you call EIS, most of us keep it simple and call it CS.  This testing is very expensive.  Your ppm test only tells you that you have something, but has nothing to do with quality or quantity of CS

On 11/4/2020 1:17 PM, PT Ferrance wrote:
Thank you.  I am just looking for a way to measure the strength (ppm) of the EIS that I make.
PT








On Tuesday, November 3, 2020, 06:00:54 PM EST, Phil Morrison <[email protected]> wrote: 






There are many meters and ways to measure water conductivity.  Once you have a reading with one meter, that reading is easily converted to reading in any other measurement system.

https://www.lenntech.com/calculators/conductivity/tds_engels.htm


--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
  Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org

Unsubscribe:
  <mailto:[email protected]?subjectArchives: 
  http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.html

Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:[email protected]>
List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:[email protected]>