Make Your Own Colloidal Silver for Pennies a Gallon - If you know what colloidal silver is, you know what it does.

in #colloidal8 years ago

Make Your Own Colloidal Silver for Pennies a Gallon  

If you know what colloidal silver is, you know what it does.  

We can't tell you lest we be put in jail.

We can't tell you, lest we be put in jail by BIG BROTHER.   

Parts List:  

1 - 150 ohm 1/4 or 1/2 watt 5% resistor (optional with grain of wheat bulb)
 

1 - 6 -12 volt 55ma grain of wheat bulb (optional)  Justs let you know the batteries are good.
 

3 - 9 volt batteries - Optional: 1 Radio Shack 30v power supply #273-1668 may be       used in place of batteries, about $22.00 

1 - 9 volt battery terminal connector 

1 - Small electronic bread board (optional) 

2 - .999 pure silver coins or bars (must be pure       silver) 

2 - Small alligator clips 

1 - Length of hook up wire (about 2 feet) 

1 - 2 pint pyrex beaker or heat resistant glass  

Instructions:  Snap the 3, 9 volt batteries together. This will give you a battery pack     yielding 27 volts. Connect the resistor, bulb & battery pack in series,     Connect about 1 foot of hook up wire to each end of this circuit. One coin     is then connected to each end of the hook up wires using the alligator     clips.   Clean silver to remove tarnish before using. Do not use chemical cleaners     or sand paper. Doing so will contaminate your solution. Use an abrasive     plastic pad such as Scotch Brite. Boil 2 pints of  distilled water in a pyrex     (heat resistant) glass or stainless pot. (glass     preferred) Pour boiling water into pyrex beaker. Insert coins about 75% into     water, being careful not to allow water to touch alligator clips holding     coins. Let stand for 15 minutes or more, occasionally stirring with a glass     or plastic rod. Allowing anything other than the     silver coins to touch the water will contaminate the solution. Test     your device by touching or shorting the two coins together. If the bulb     lights, it is functioning properly.  After 15 minutes you should have a concentration of about 3 - 5 ppm of colloidal silver. 30 minutes will produce a concentration of about 6 -10 ppm. (parts per million) Note: The solution will turn a straw color several hours after you have stopped the process, indicating a concentration of 6 - 10 ppm or greater.  If the light illuminates immediately upon insertion of the silver into the water, the water is contaminated. Start over with fresh  distilled water. If the light illuminates during the process, stir the water. If the light does not go out after stirring, you have a very high concentration of colloidal silver. Store colloidal silver in a dark glass container away from sunlight.

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I've been making it for years. Cost is more than a few pennies per gallon. Silver is still silver. You missed the filtering process, the black soot looking contaminates from the process itself needs to be eliminated by filtering through a coffee filter. You really need a color code chart to tell you the strengths of your batch.

The black soot is silver that is not going into solution. If the so called soot is something other than silver, the water is contaminated or the silver is not pure. You can get as elaborate as you want in the manufacturing process or you can just - Make it. If it costs you more than pennies per gallon your wasting a lot of silver.

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