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Magnetic water softener

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  • #31
    I see. I guess the builder know that copper is better than steel even without reading Schauberger lol. I just remember that there were many brass spoon and fork made last century, and not one manufacture it today.

    I still surprise that copper do not shield magnet at all. Maybe they even work together.

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    • #32
      solar water distiller-softener

      I decided to bring back this thread from long ago as I have new info that is related to the magnetic water softener. With all of the recent disasters, floods, earthquakes, landslides etc, many people are left without clean drinking water. To make a solar distiller you will need two plastic bottles with lids. Glue the back of the lids together with the treads showing. Drill a hole through the lids to accommodate a pipe, 1/2'' pvc works great. Now cut a pipe same length as one bottle. Insert through hole in lids, screw onto bottle. Leave about 2 to 3'' gap from end of pipe to end of bottle. Glue pipe protruding out of lid. Now screw onto other bottle. One will be upright, the other one upside down. Now fill the bottle with the short pipe extruding, as this is your dirty water bottle. Sit in the sun fore a few hours and as water heats it will turn into a vapor and accumulate in the upper bottle between the pipe and bottle. You can also suspend above any heat source to speed up the process, just don't allow flames to touch the bottle. Now to make the water softer, you can add magnets to the short end of the pipe, by reading the rest of the thread. Good Luck. stealth

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      • #33
        In light of all the disasters here and worldwide, I thought it would be appropriate to post this information. This is a simple distillation/desalination kit that can be made up ahead of time to be used when needed. With floods, volcanos, landslides, tornados, hurricanes and tsunamis threatening most of the coastal areas around the world, clean drinking water may become scarce. Relief efforts may be delayed or nonexistent in some areas. All these disasters have the ability to disrupt or sever water lines or pollute existing water sources.
        Drinking water not purified can result in diahhrea, which can cause further dehydration. You can only survive three days without water. After a disaster strikes, you may not have access to wood or other flammable material, so having the capability of using solar is a big plus for many people. Good Luck. stealth

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