The true test, is to replace the kettle power cord, with your .99999 Silver
DIY, boil some water and make a cup of tea. Is it a better tea than the one with the 1.50$ original power cord?
For your attention:
Silver conducts only 5% better than copper.
Silver cost is 130 times more than copper. So you did a bad deal...
You could gain the same conductivity with 5% more cross section in the copper wire, for 130 times less the price!
I don't know about silver, but copper that goes to the electric industry, is by STD 99.98% pure copper. The rest 0.02% has no significant on conductivity.
I don't know about the law in your country, in mine, you need to have an electrician certificate to do a power job. If someone get shocked from a none certified cable, it is punishable with jail time.
DIY, boil some water and make a cup of tea. Is it a better tea than the one with the 1.50$ original power cord?
For your attention:
Silver conducts only 5% better than copper.
Silver cost is 130 times more than copper. So you did a bad deal...
You could gain the same conductivity with 5% more cross section in the copper wire, for 130 times less the price!
I don't know about silver, but copper that goes to the electric industry, is by STD 99.98% pure copper. The rest 0.02% has no significant on conductivity.
I don't know about the law in your country, in mine, you need to have an electrician certificate to do a power job. If someone get shocked from a none certified cable, it is punishable with jail time.