Thank you for sharing your invention, very inventive! I would recommend adding a few drops of dishwashing liquid to break the surface tension of the solution. Another thing is that by connecting the water supply hose directly to the tap, you no longer need the separate water container with pump. The pressure will be sufficient in my opinion. You can always find an adapter to connect to a tap. There are even versions where you don't screw the hose onto the thread of the tap, but connect it to some sort of rubber cap that slides over the outlet of the tap.
Thanks for the feedback. Shall try and connect to the tap, but then I can't use soap in the water. Will post a simple sketch and better pictures of the funnel and how it is put together, everything is put together with glue, but will make a new one that will be soldered.
@@MrFlyon Since your outcome is already of high quality, I think the soap will not really have huge influence on the yield. And soldering is a good idea. Goodluck!
Great innovation👍😃 Thank you for solving a problem I have been thinking about for a long time. Will build a similar one tonight🙂. However, I would advise against connecting directly to the water faucet, ordinary water fittings are not made to work against resistance/pressure, this will damage the gaskets in your kitchen faucet and cause it to start leaking. Just a tip in all wellness🙂. Continue with the 12v pump I think. /Dennis 🇸🇪
Cool. If you wanted a little more agitation in the first jar pinch the end of the small pipe a bit which would make it more of a fan jet then just a inflow of flush water.
What sizes of copper tubing did you use? Great vid btw! Was looking at buying a micro siphon sluice but would much rather diy. Ic chips are my favorite to process!!
And you can also put the construction in a separate low plastic box, so you don't have to clean the sink after use. One other thing, in the video you show details that are out of frame, including the way you placed the funnel. You could fix this by including an image of the detail.
Thank you for sharing your invention, very inventive!
I would recommend adding a few drops of dishwashing liquid to break the surface tension of the solution. Another thing is that by connecting the water supply hose directly to the tap, you no longer need the separate water container with pump. The pressure will be sufficient in my opinion. You can always find an adapter to connect to a tap. There are even versions where you don't screw the hose onto the thread of the tap, but connect it to some sort of rubber cap that slides over the outlet of the tap.
Thanks for the feedback.
Shall try and connect to the tap, but then I can't use soap in the water.
Will post a simple sketch and better pictures of the funnel and how it is put together, everything is put together with glue, but will make a new one that will be soldered.
@@MrFlyon Since your outcome is already of high quality, I think the soap will not really have huge influence on the yield. And soldering is a good idea. Goodluck!
Great innovation👍😃
Thank you for solving a problem I have been thinking about for a long time. Will build a similar one tonight🙂. However, I would advise against connecting directly to the water faucet, ordinary water fittings are not made to work against resistance/pressure, this will damage the gaskets in your kitchen faucet and cause it to start leaking. Just a tip in all wellness🙂. Continue with the 12v pump I think. /Dennis 🇸🇪
Brilliant video mate , very good idea think I might have a go at making one of those ,keep up the good work 👍😁
thank you :)
Excellent idea! You can even run it straight from the tap if you don't have a pump.
thanks, will try and run it straight from the tap next time. good idea.
So much better than dirty chocolate milk looking chemicals!
Very good idea. Thanks for sharing
Thanks 🙂
Cool. If you wanted a little more agitation in the first jar pinch the end of the small pipe a bit which would make it more of a fan jet then just a inflow of flush water.
Thanks, Will look into it.🙂
Your English is very good. Nice Job.
thanks...
Nice work.
thank you :)
Thank you for sharing.
Отличная идея, обязательно сделаю себе снимите ещё продолжения видео
Thanks, hope it works well for you.🙂
good ideea !!!
ingenious!!
What sizes of copper tubing did you use? Great vid btw! Was looking at buying a micro siphon sluice but would much rather diy. Ic chips are my favorite to process!!
Hi i used 10 mm,
is very easy to make, hope to see videos of others who have made one, good luck.
@MrFlyon is the first run from the pump smaller though? Maybe 5mm? Thanks 👍
@bnae38 the hose frome the pump is 4 mm inside.
Would this work with 10micron grind?
Thanks for the comment.
I'm not sure. a lot depends on the water pressure into the first glass.
And you can also put the construction in a separate low plastic box, so you don't have to clean the sink after use.
One other thing, in the video you show details that are out of frame, including the way you placed the funnel. You could fix this by including an image of the detail.
I always pull the metal out first with a magnet
fantastic
thank you :)
Cool
I really like your system, very clever! Do you ever recover any gold out of the 2nd glass? And what else ends up in the 2nd glass?
thank you very much, I have never seen gold in the 2nd glass, it is only the ash that I want to get rid of that collects there.
How you separate silica from gold
Have you ever seen a starving scrappy?
I usually soak my manhood in a glass of warm milk.
5 gallons = 19 liters water
😄Thanks, learn something every day, will remember that.
Привет а мелкие волоски золото остаются на дне
Yes I don't lose anything 🙂
Never saw any gold.
It is there....
Cool