View Full Version : Homemade MMS
Bubu
24th November 2013, 00:53
I decided to try MMS after reading testimonials from this forum. problem is I can't find a source in our country, Philippines.
I was wondering if a person with no knowledge in chemistry can make it at home.
Thanks
Tesseract
24th November 2013, 01:17
You should read both sides of the argument, I think on this forum you will mostly see only one side, before you decide whether or not you want to drink that stuff. I've seen simple instructions on the web that anyone could follow, you do have to be careful with the dosage. I am keeping the dosage to zero for myself.
Bubu
24th November 2013, 02:04
My motto with regards to nutrition is consume only natural unprocessed foods. So why this chemical? I have been studying the validity of claims with regards to mms for months not just in this forum. News about actions of governments wikipedia etc and decided it's worth the try.
Carmody
24th November 2013, 03:29
It is probably best that you find ways to make it, in other places than here.
Making it is another matter altogether. :)
The forum can discuss use, or claims, and other such things. Detailing how to make it can get into legal issues. The forum should remain in a state of minimizing vulnerabilities that could potentially be exploited.
Snowflower
24th November 2013, 04:13
Buy the book from Jim Humble for good instructions on how to make it. Ingredients are sodium chlorite (not chlorine) and citric acid.
Guest
24th November 2013, 04:21
Hi Bubu
You may be able to find out where to purchase MMS here:
Here is Jim Humble's website. http://jimhumble.org/ He's the expert on MMS and you can probably e-mail him about sources for MMS in your country. His site is exceptional.
Site for his books and videos http://www.miraclemineral.org/
and his YouTube channel. http://m.youtube.com/#/user/JimHumbleLive?desktop_uri=%2Fuser%2FJimHumbleLive
Hope this helps
Love
Nora
kanishk
24th November 2013, 13:21
FORMULA FOR CALCULATING PROPORTIONAL WEIGHT of NaClO2 is to H2O for making 28% sodium chlorite solution
If,
W = Weight of water (grams) = Volume of water (ml or milliliters or cubic centimeters)
N = Weight of Sodium Chlorite (gms or grams)
Then formula for calculating quantity of one ingredient when we know the quantity of other is,
N = ( W X 0.28 ) / 0.72
W = ( N - 0.28 N ) / 0.28
Example:
If we have 90ml of water(=90 gms) then how many grams of sodium chlorite we will need ?
N = ( 90 X 0.28) / 0.72
= 25.2 / 0.72
= 35 gm's
If we have 100gms of sodium chlorite How many grms or how many mls of water we will need ?
W = (100) - (0.28 X 100) / 0.28
= 100 - 28 / 0.28
= 72 / 0.28
= 257.14 ml's or gm's
kanishk
24th November 2013, 13:44
Find Some chemical price list in Phillipines like these are from india
www.sdfine.com/pricelistpdf.pdf www.integrachem.com/pdfs/IntegraChemicalCatalog.pdf http://www.sdfine.com/pricelist_view.aspx www.finarchemicals.com/pdf/pricelist.pdf
You will need Sodium chlorite, but don't necessarily need 100% pure form, it will be more expensive. You can get sodium chlorite [CAS no.7758-19-2] 80% pure, and the other 20% is sodium chloride(table salt).
Before buying chemical get familiar with good brands of chemical in your area. As for buying any other chemical they come in many different grades,
Top to bottom purity is degrading in this list
Guaranteed Reagent (GR) - Analytical chemistry grade. Must meet or exceed the benchmark requirements for analytical chemistry set by (ACS), Certificate of Analysis on demand. (EMD®)
Primary Standard (PS) - Analytical chemistry grade. This is the reference standard for exceptional purity. The terminology in relation to the standardizing of volumetric solutions and the preparation of a reference standards for laboratory comparison.
Reagent A.C.S. – Laboratory chemistry grade. The abbreviation "A.C.S.," stands for American Chemical Society specification for laboratory reagents. Any merchant offering (ACS) reagents must produce a Certificate of Analysis on demand as proof of compliance to the American Chemical Society standard.
AR – Laboratory chemistry grade. This standard comes from the Mallinckrodt grade of analytical reagents. If this chemical meets or exceeds the benchmark requirements of the American Chemical Society Committee on Analytical Reagents it will be labelled with the notation AR (ACS) reagent. (MBI®)
Reagent - Laboratory chemistry grade. This is a manufacturer set standard generally excepted by chemists to mean the highest quality commercially available, this is a standard is only to be trusted from suppliers with a long history of customer satisfaction. Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
USP/GenAR - Laboratory chemistry grade. Manufactured to meet current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) for the standard (1995 USP 23), British Pharmacopeia (BP), European Pharmacopeia (PhEur, EP) and Endotoxin (LAL) tested. Certificate of Analysis on demand.(MBI®)
USP - Laboratory/ General chemistry grade*. Manufactured to meet current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) set by the United States Pharmacopeia (USP). (*see USP for exact chemical standard)
OR - Laboratory/ General chemistry grade. Organic Reagents suitable for general research applications. (MBI®)
Lab Grade - Laboratory/ General chemistry grade. This is a manufacturer set standard generally excepted by chemists to mean suitable for laboratory and medical use along with the the study of the microscopic anatomy of cells and tissues of plants and animals. Some times referred to as Medical Grade. Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
NF - Laboratory/ General chemistry grade*. Manufactured to the standards set by the National Formulary (NF) (*see NF for exact chemical standard)
FCC - Laboratory/ General chemistry grade*. Manufactured to the standards set by the Food Chemical Codex (FCC) (*see FCC for exact chemical standard)
CP (Chemically Pure) - General chemistry grade. This is a manufacturer set standard generally excepted by chemists to mean suitable general prepose applications. Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
Purified - General chemistry grade. As a rule this manufacturer set standard is only used to describe inorganic chemicals that are of a good commercial quality.
Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
Practical – Industrial chemistry grade. This manufacturer set standard is for good to low commercial quality chemicals, generally used to describe organic chemicals that may contain isomers or intermediates not isolated during manufacture. Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
Technical - Industrial chemistry grade. This is a manufacturer set standard generally excepted by chemists to mean suitable industrial applications. Note: There is no official (ACS) benchmark for this standard.
From http://www.drugs-forum.com/forum/showwiki.php?title=Grades_of_Chemicals
Rozzy
24th November 2013, 13:57
It is a personal decision whether to use MMS or not, personally I have seen/witnessed and experienced the benefits of using MMS for years. I have used it for years, I am healthy as can be, those whom I know that were in danger do to serious illness are AOK today. Usually people go until they are desperate and faced with otherwise terminal conditions before they listen to yours truly or other folks like myself. Suffering the indignities and pain of so called modern medicine, running out of money while doing the same seems to be the norm now. MMS is so simple, safe and effective I can not imagine waiting on the side lines because of some fear of it. If you are suffering your way through the treatments of conventional medicine and are sick of not being healed then it is time do something about it.
Taking a whole host of drugs with very serious side effects that in the long run is guaranteed to kill you seems like a very poor option. Going under the knife to remove diseased body parts also seems like a loosing proposition for the long run. MMS is not the only cure that works, there are many things that are very effective, when it comes to a cure all that works on a very broad spectrum of conditions MMS is the one.
Tesseract
24th November 2013, 15:13
FORMULA FOR CALCULATING PROPORTIONAL WEIGHT of NaClO2 is to H2O for making 28% sodium chlorite solution
If,
W = Weight of water (grams) = Volume of water (ml or milliliters or cubic centimeters)
N = Weight of Sodium Chlorite (gms or grams)
Then formula for calculating quantity of one ingredient when we know the quantity of other is,
N = ( W X 0.28 ) / 0.72
W = ( N - 0.28 N ) / 0.28
Example:
If we have 90ml of water(=90 gms) then how many grams of sodium chlorite we will need ?
N = ( 90 X 0.28) / 0.72
= 25.2 / 0.72
= 35 gm's
If we have 100gms of sodium chlorite How many grms or how many mls of water we will need ?
W = (100) - (0.28 X 100) / 0.28
= 100 - 28 / 0.28
= 72 / 0.28
= 257.14 ml's or gm's
Just in case anyone was thinking about making this particular solution up and drinking it, I advise against it. To do so would be extremely dangerous and perhaps fatal (if my understanding my sodium chlorite toxicity is correct). This kind of concentrated solution is just meant as a stock solution, from which only the tiniest amounts are used for treatment at a time. Please exercise a little caution when posting this kind of information. I agree with Carmody's comments above.
kanishk
24th November 2013, 16:28
I tried MMS, but ingesting it is very difficult for me. So I found out that my body is very resistive of MMS, can not tolerate it. Even the smell of it can make me sick. Same for one guy who once ingested large dose when he was seek, and now whenever a car running on natural gas or LPG goes nearby the smell of it make him sick and hair on his body stand. Some people can not tolerate MMS. Dr. Bill Deagle also talks about it that it damages your DNA. So when you have very little resources to treat yourself then you can use it. Like many people in africa are benefiting from it, for their malaria and other diseases. And yes using MMS on fungal infection is not a good idea, all the infected area most probably can get injured.
Carmody
24th November 2013, 17:26
I use unsweetened cranberry juice, with no added ascorbic acid.
Works incredibly well in preventing the gag reflex.
It is probably the best potential mixing agent out there.
brenie
24th November 2013, 19:40
Hello Bubu.
You are on the right track, don't pay to much attention to the negative replies.
I would suggest you visit this web-page... http://mmswiki.org/index.php?title=Red_Cross
What you have to know is, when Jim Humble discovered the use he could put mms too 20/30 years ago it was as a last straw effort to cure some of his work team of Malaria, and it worked.
He tried to alert the medical industry to this simple cheap effective cure, but was of course blocked by the powers above.
If you watch the vid: just 17min you will see how he finally proved his cure, for Malaria.
Now for many years he has given information that indicate mms does help in many other med-conditions, so if he was correct in his first theory re: Malaria, and this has now obviously been proved, you would be a fool not to believe if he said it also will cure a ingrowing toe nail!
Follow the vid: and other research to get a full picture of mms.
I wish you good health. Regards, Brenie.
Bubu
24th November 2013, 20:21
Hello Bubu.
You are on the right track, don't pay to much attention to the negative replies.
Brenie.
I listen to positive or negative but most of all I listen to me. Thanks everyone for your help I understand that this chemicals should be use only as a last resort and not as a food supplement.
Thanks Kanishk that's very helpful of you to provide a complete formula that is pretty easy to follow.
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