IS THERE REALLY “GOLDEN” COLLOIDAL SILVER?
There is no such thing as “golden” colloidal silver. Silver is white. Lange’s Handbook of Chemistry lists silver as “…the whitest of metals. Pure silver particles suspended in water should have a very slight white-colored fog to it. If you make colloidal silver with a very low current, it will take a long time… long enough for silver compounds to be formed due to electrolysis. Even distilled water contains trace elements, and Merck’s Handbook describes many silver compounds as “pale yellow.” They include silver bromide, silver carbonate, silver chlorite, silver hyponitrate, silver iodide, silver nitrite, silver phosphate and silver picrate. Some of these compounds are described as toxic. The proper way to make colloidal silver is to use enough current to cause tiny silver particles (each 12 to 15 atoms) to be “knocked” off of the electrodes, making the desired concentration in 7 to 15 minutes. This is a MECHANICAL process. You want to do it quickly enough so that chemical compounds