You're welcome, thank's for sharing your magnet idea. It works phenomenally! I've wanted to upload a video like this one for quite some time. Good luck during your roast today.
More on where it was from, how you refined it, what you were expecting priour to the results Just a little more talking to fill in the dead space Keep it up
The ore was crushed quartz monzonite from the Lizard Cove Mine in Grantsville, Utah. The ore was crushed in my ball mill then classified through 70 mesh. The results came out as expected roasting the crushed ore was very beneficial.
@ homogenize just means ‘make equal’. Don’t stir or shake the samples, fold them over each other in quarters or use a splitter. Takes a while but the longer you do it the better the results will be. Prevents the ‘nugget effect’ from occurring where you get more of one heavy material in a portion than the other.
I considered that in the making of this video but I chose not to because I felt the ore had been mixed thoroughly prior to filming. Also that ore only has trace elements of gold. The primaries are copper and silver from a high sulfite deposit.
Right on man thanks for the shout out! Great experiment! I have some material to roast today pretty crazy how this video dropped on the same day 😅
You're welcome, thank's for sharing your magnet idea. It works phenomenally! I've wanted to upload a video like this one for quite some time. Good luck during your roast today.
Looking good indeed fam 😎. Keep at it. Gold Squad Out 🤠
Thanks buddy!
That was fun to watch.
Thank you so much! That was my intent to make the video enjoyable as well as educational.
I enjoyed this, but i would have liked more info in your narration
What would you have liked to hear more about?
More on where it was from, how you refined it, what you were expecting priour to the results
Just a little more talking to fill in the dead space
Keep it up
Sounds good, thank you!
The ore was crushed quartz monzonite from the Lizard Cove Mine in Grantsville, Utah. The ore was crushed in my ball mill then classified through 70 mesh. The results came out as expected roasting the crushed ore was very beneficial.
@smokeyandspikeproductions i appreciate that, im in Australia have a good Christmas
Oh no you didn’t properly homogenize and split the samples uggggggh
I mixed the crushed ore very thoroughly, to the best of my abilities and separated out equal portions. Homolegize is dairy related.
@ homogenize just means ‘make equal’. Don’t stir or shake the samples, fold them over each other in quarters or use a splitter. Takes a while but the longer you do it the better the results will be. Prevents the ‘nugget effect’ from occurring where you get more of one heavy material in a portion than the other.
I considered that in the making of this video but I chose not to because I felt the ore had been mixed thoroughly prior to filming. Also that ore only has trace elements of gold. The primaries are copper and silver from a high sulfite deposit.
What the fuck did I just watch? I thought when they said they were panning that they were looking for gold.
Not in this ore, possibly trace amounts of gold. Educational content showing the difference between unroasted and roasted ore.