Quote Originally Posted by David Merrill View Post


The Van der Waal radius will drop up to 15º when devitalized by setting in pipes. Fresh out of a rain cloud or a bubbling spring though, the Van der Waal radius is 120º. So the water can form hex-rings and this is much more absorbent into cells.



Regards,

David Merrill.
How do you measure the Van der Waal radius of your water?

We get our water from a spring next to the cabin.
It gets pumped into a 100 gal holding tank, through a couple of sediment filters (140 & 5 microns). It flows by gravity into the cabin plumbing, which is mostly plastic and some copper pipe for the hot water.
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100 gallons lasts between 3 to 7 days around here.
I would like to know what our Van der Waal radius is.

Recently I began to add about 8 oz of baking soda to each tank fill, to mitigate possible radiation contamination from Fukushima fallout. This raised the ph of the water and made it more pleasant for showering.
I don't know about the radiation, I haven't taken the Geiger counter to it yet.

I think the idea of structured water is very nice, but I wonder how a little tubular plastic/metal/composite man-made device is supposed to make water like it's been flowing out of a mountain stream or other God-made structure?