Originally Posted by
41haikuwarriors
My question was if any HERE without prior knowledge of chemistry had gone from scrapper to refiner.
I never said I had no knowledge.
It doesn't seem my question is being read correctly.
The answers i have gotten do seem to answer that, none of you refine. So thank you anyway.
I was just bored and wanted a story
I was close. I was reading and reading and reading. Hokes, the GRF, etc., etc.
I have no formal chemistry training, but I can pick up most anything if I put my mind to it. Experimental physics, chemistry, etc. No worries here. Nut the further I got into it, the more I realized that in order to do it right, I needed way more equipment than I was able to afford unless I spent some good time bodging it all together.
To really do it all properly requires a good fume hood and being able to dispose of (or properly neutralize) spent chemicals. Trying to make a living at a cheap paying job and trying to make money scrapping led me to this forum where I figured out that I could sell those materials that I am getting for a good profit without all of the headaches of the refining.
so, NO. I did not make the jump, but I went far enough to really understand the process and start accumulating gear, materials, and instructional videos. I am thinking of one day soon putting some of that stuff together and listing it on here for someone who may be interested. I have a couple of laser Steve's videos, some melting pots, lab equipment (beakers and such) as well as some raw starting material that is gold filled to start with.
Bottom line is that anyone really thinking about getting into this has GOT to go into it with a full head and safety in mind. Not just for yourself, but for your entire neighborhood. If you are doing some stuff outside on a day with no breeze, you are messing with your entire neighborhood's health and safety. Those fumes will just hang there.
Wish I could help you more with a story of actually getting into refining. But, yes, someone with a good head and no formal chemistry training can take the time and learn to do it right. It just takes a lot to learn to do it right.
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