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  1. #21
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by myekem View Post
    Here is a good video of a homebuilt one that appears to work good. Not really a shaker or an air table and most sorts before his centrifugal seperator but appears like a good wet setup.



    Nice set up the guy who built it has a good grasp on gravity separation, he's using a sluice to separate to copper from the plastic. The heavier copper collecting in the riffles with the water carrying off the lighter plastic.
    Last edited by alloy2; 02-11-2016 at 01:45 PM.


  2. #22
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by eesakiwi View Post
    I have been looking hard at these tables.
    Part of what I am saving up is silicon chips, flatpacks, thru hole, plug ins and the 'j' legged eproms for incineration and the Gold/Copper leg recovery. Also the power transistors which I find out have Gold wire connections too.
    Since I have a lot of this saved up, and returns seem to be about 0.6-0.7gms per Lb.
    I have a good amount of Gold there.... Ounce plus... :-)

    And since I have about 200kg of plastic coated Copper wire, selling or burning is my only option, till the shaker table and a homebuilt chopper would give me the chance to get #2 price with a clean process and over 99% recovery of Copper.
    My yard only pays the lowest return % for plastic coated wire.
    And 50kg of my wire is the 4 x2 strand telephone wire with no outer cover = 85% return...

    My quick question is, are the riffles tapered in height towards the end?
    I am thinking that 'baby corrugated iron' could be used as the riffle board if its not nessesary to taper them.
    Everything else seems pretty easy, I have lots of time to build one, its a investment in that time too.

    A couple of days ago my neighbours son popped over to ask me about 'making a home built casting furnace' for melting Ali.
    He had a mid 70's book with some rough details in it.
    I pointed out some stuff for him, like we cannot get the cement here, crucibles are far too expensive here and his size ideas a bit too small.
    And it will not melt Cast Iron..
    But, I dragged out a diesel furnace burner/blower I have, showed him some gas bottles for casting in, mentioned using kittylitter & sand & cement, along with some refractory insulation as cement and recycling cast Ali as Ali for casting.

    So I think we could make one between us. And I can use it to incinerate silicon chips....
    He can do the actual physical work and I supply parts and ideas, nice deal.

    I gotta say alloy2, without the shaker table idea, it'd be a used gas bottle as curcible on gas hob and Gold pan the wires out....by hand.

    Using a shaker table would be perfect for Gold mining in our areas too, there's no 'claims' for hobby panning/mining here, just free areas to do it in and a 'environmental' guide to follow.

    Hobby mining is about a Ounce a week and less...per person. NZ$1300 a Oz?
    If I were only running copper chops or coarse gold over the table would use none tapered riffles then for fine gold tapered.

    I would avoid using iron crucibles, molten aluminum becomes a solvent when molten and will pick up impurity’s from the iron creating an unknown alloy which may make any castings you make brittle.

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  4. #23
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    Here's the second video that shows up after the first on at separating system and is really explained. Mike


    "Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}

    Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked

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  6. #24
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    This is for my Kiwi friend in NZ. my buddy manufactured centrifuges for recovering placer gold then after his passing I acquired all of his drawings ranging in size from 12 to 38 inches. The one shown below is a 12 inch unit that is capable of processing 160 pounds of material per minute.

    I hired a fellow from the RFQ site to convert the paper drawings into machine readable language so that I may have the parts cut out using a laser CNC for neat accurate cuts. I would recommend this site that offers CAD, and all sorts of CNC cutting and machining, RFQWork.com- Online Job Quotes for Machine Shops, Fabricators, Molders, Stampers, Casters Forgers and more!

    The RFQ site has a membership that will do short runs and prototyping as well larger contracts.

    I'm building a 12 inch centrifuge very similar to the one below with the exception the unit is powered by a gasoline engine from a riding lawnmower with a vertical crankshaft also using the gasoline engine makes it totally portable.



    Last edited by alloy2; 02-13-2016 at 02:04 AM.

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  8. #25
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Cool picture of some local quartz, wet with water gives it an electrifying ghosting effect.


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  10. #26
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Correction the mercury was lost by previous prospectors.

    Not going to get into a flow blown story on how this discovery came to be, those of you that also belong to the GRF can get the full scoop.

    What your looking at it a rock that I split on the fissure line, the surface wetted to enhance the image, using a tungsten flash took this picture. The silver material with the purple halo is a mercury / gold amalgam.

    The rock once pulverised and ground into mud when panned had plenty of visible fine gold that the liberated mercury soon stole from the bottom of the pan. Mother Nature refuses to give up her treasures easy, the gold is not lost just temporarily unavailable.

    Last edited by alloy2; 02-17-2016 at 12:05 AM.

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  12. #27
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    This is not a nugget, just some gold from inside a fissure.


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  14. #28
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Specimens such as this arsenopyrite have been known to contain some serious amounts of gold. The problem is that the gold is locked up in arsenic and that the ore must first be crushed then roasted to recover the gold.

    The specimen below weighs over 5 lbs.




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  16. #29
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    All I wanted was a 2kg bar of gold to call my own instead gawd with his sense of hunoir gives me a mountain of platinum.

    This is a continuation of my past summer project at the waah plant. I have isolated the source of the platinum to two different sources.

    That black sand at the wash plant contains a cosiderable amount of platinum but the mother load is in the rock of the out crop located at the pit.

    The rock samples taken from the outcrop initially look black but after pulverising are really green in color.

    The pulverised rock has visible inclusions of platinum along with some sort of sulphide mineral insoluble in both HCL and AR none magnetic to boot.

    New learning curve coming up on sulphide minerals.

    But the constant use of grey matter keeps it interesting.

    Use of smartphone makes it difficult to post pictures. If you look at some of my back posts there are pictures of the wash plant and out crop.

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  18. #30
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    The outcrop is the source of the platinum found at the wash pit.

    We do not have a core drill but have the equipment nessesary to drill blast holes. So were going to blast some rock to get at some fresh un weathered rock.

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  20. #31
    alloy2 started this thread.
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    Prospecting has been thus far full of surprises the platinum in the outcrop has a chemical symbol pts II, it's a black sulphide.

    Had it not been for the use of chemistry the platinum sulphide would have been discarded as a black mystery tossed and forgotten.

    A fortune lost to ignorance.

    I bid you all farewell wishing both friend and foe good fortune.
    Last edited by alloy2; 03-17-2016 at 12:57 PM.

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  22. #32
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    Thanks for your contributions. I look forward to you updating us on your progress. I love reading of your successes but I really respect you for sharing your failures(or pre-successes might be the correct term).

    73, Mike

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