> condensation process. However, I would wager to bet that the cheapest
> source would be used in bottled 'distilled' water for Walgreens
> retail, and that sometimes you are getting DI instead of distilled,
> hence the lower conductivity of the Zephyr hills brand. Call 'em up
> and see?
John,
That's probably the case. Perhaps what Zephyhills calls "distilled" goes
through a de-ionizing process.
I've always wanted to know the difference between the various water types
sold on the grocery store shelves. At the moment, I can easily purchase
distilled or "purified water," but I've never been able to find what the
exact differences are. Probably a call into Zephyrhills is in order to know
for sure.
Paul, W9AC
_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
|