Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hi Yo Silver



The silver wire came with no problem, and I've already fixed up my first batch of silver colloids without any real difficulty. It's not rocket science to get this to happen. The most remote thing for me to understand about this process was how long to leave the battery power on in order to get the right amount of silver into the distilled water.

Most of the videos that said anything about this referenced the color of the water in order to tell how many parts per million were in the water. The criteria was basically how yellow the water became. Slightly yellow meant 4-5 ppm (parts per million), Yellow approached 8-12 ppm, and amber, according to how deep amber it turned, represented above 18-20+ ppm. The lower ranges seemed to be the most recommended for killing bacteria and fungi, and several of the videos said greater amounts didn't really help.

Finally, in the last video on making colloid silver I watched, the presenter demonstrated exactly how to use the laser light to tell about how much silver had accumulated. I have a laser light. I bought it at the check-out counter at Wal-Mart a year ago. I really bought it for the included LED flashlight. The red laser beam was a plus because I've been curious since I've never actually owned one. The whole deal cost less than $2.

I didn't really understand the laser method the guy was talking about until the silver wires had been dropped into the water for a couple of hours. That's how long the process had been activated by the batteries when I watched the last video. Suddenly, I realized the laser light was laying right there in front of me and I didn't even have to look for it.

The water "looked like" it had some silver in it. I had put the distilled water into a quart-sized glass canning jar. The combination of glass and silver seemed reminiscent of old fashion mirrors. I sort of knew the silver had to be in there to get that impression, but I had no definitive way of proving it. Soon after I pointed the laser at the glass jar full of distilled water I found out what it was all about.

The silver colloid parts are nano sized particles that remain in suspension in the water for a long time. I don't know how long. When I shone the red laser beam in the water the silver colloids reflected the red laser light right where the beam penetrated the water in a straight, laser-beam line all the way from one side of the jar to the other.

It reminded me of a jewel thief movie where the jewels were protected by a detection system that used laser beams the thief couldn't see. If the thief's body broke the laser line the alarm sounded. The way the thief overcame this was to blow cigarette smoke into the room, and the laser beams popped right into view where the smoke got in the way, but it didn't trigger the alarm.

The transformer I employed to do the same thing I did with the three nine volt batteries hooked up in parallel didn't work. The three batteries combine to put 27 volts on the silver wire. The transformer reduced the 120 volt house current to 20 volts. Apparently that is not enough, but maybe the transformer itself don't work or maybe my soldering job didn't do right.

Drinking the silver colloid water has not been all that pleasant. Maybe it's because of one of the videos that featured this guy who claimed to be a pharmacist. He made some silver colloid water and then dumped the equivalent of some stomach acid into it, and the reflectively bright water turned into an unappetizing gray mush.

This pharmacist guy suggested that drinking the silver colloid didn't do much good, but his view differs from every other video I watched. He said the idea was to get the silver nano particles into the blood stream, and the best way to do that was to give yourself an enema, or at least, to hold a mouthful of it under your tongue so that it could be absorbed into the blood sublingually before the stomach acid transformed it.

Trying to get a liquid to stay under my tongue to get the sublingual absorption to happen is not easy. I tried to hold my tongue up against the roof of my mouth to make the areas below my tongue available until I got bored with that and swallowed it.

All the videos seemed to agree that the colloid silver water needs to be stored out of the sunlight, and preferably in a dark amber-colored glass container. I have a couple of small plastic dark brown spray bottles that came with hydrogen peroxide in them. I dumped one of them and put the colloid water in it so I could spray it on my skin, and up into my sinus cavities.

This approach may work best for me. This stuff purportedly kills most every bacteria known to man. That seems a little over the top for me, but I'm used to putting saline water up my nostrils because of sinus blockage. I've had lots less problems in this area since I stopped smoking tobacco, but I still get stuffed up fairly regularly, and have to take steps to alleviate such conditions.

It's my opinion that if a person can get high snorting stuff up their nose like cocaine, then the silver colloids will get absorbed in a like manner, and thus avoid coming in contact with my stomach acids. I may give myself an enema, but I doubt it. I'd have to buy the equipment to do that, and I never forget I'm a miser.

Between spraying the silver colloid water on the skin of my hands and feet and holding some of the water in my mouth with my tongue placed against the top of my mouth, and spraying it up into each nostril while I'm sucking it up into my sinuses, that will get enough in my blood stream to to what this stuff does.