I'm sorry to hear that kephra.... I understand, as I've read everything you've written recently on the matter, that you aren't interested in passing the baton on this...
Its not that, its just not fair to someone else to turn over a design that requires unavailable parts.
I'll accept that... as an electronics hobbyist I just wanted to make one for myself... producing for others that's just a huge undertaking I'm not so sure about...
So can you answer me this? What was so amazing about the silvertron? What was its main genius?
Is there something about it beyond just limiting a specific current for a specific period of time and having a little screen that's easy to program your cycle? It then just does the run for you and shuts off when it's done?
That's not exactly how it worked. Yes, it has a programmable current limiter, but it didn't rely on having constant current. If you programmed in 10ma for the current, but the current was only 3ma, it still came out correctly. The Silvertron Elite performed a calculus operation integrating the current/time curve. You could also do a run without any electrolyte, set the machine to 15ma, and make ionic silver accurately even though the current started at .5 ma and gradually increased to 6.2 ma as the run proceeded. In fact you could remove the electrodes for an unlimited time, and put them back into the water, and the run would still be accurate.
But, I made the system so the average person with no electronics or chemistry experience could make excellent Colloidal Silver with a very short learning curve.
Again thank you so much for this forum and I don't know if u believe in miracles but I will pray for a miracle for you... that sucks to resign to never getting better... my father has been battled diverticulitis for a couple years and it's not fun at all those sorts of problems...
Wishing you well!
I never hid the principles behind the Silvertron. Its all here on this forum. I even posted my 'C' source code here for about a week and posted pictures of the circuitry.
I have to resign myself to not getting better. I can't grow a new set of fingers, or a new large bowel. Losing parts of my fingers really sucks because I can no longer play music. I've played music in bands since I was a teenager. Here is a song I recorded 20 years ago when I was just learning to play the pedal steel.
WonderfulWorld. I know, I was a better engineer than a musician but it payed my way through college:)
re: diverticulitis. My gastroenterologist told me I absolutely had to take Humira, which would cost me several thousand $ a month, and he got really mad when I told him that wasn't going to happen. Instead, I take 180mg of melatonin a day (about $5.00 a month). It does the same thing as Humira, but better. (It blocks TNF-alpha) Humira is antibodies against TNF-a but eventually I think a persons innate immune system learns to attack the foreign antibodies and then they have to take Humira more often. That happened to one of my friends.