Smelting Jeff William's Secret Gold

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  • Опубліковано 24 чер 2022
  • Surprise! I had one more bag of @Askjeffwilliams super rich high grade gold ore! Jeff's ore has been hiding secret gold and I FOUND IT! Check out how I smelt down and refine his gold as well as an experiment to determine the best way to clean gold in quartz specimens
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 684

  • @Askjeffwilliams
    @Askjeffwilliams Рік тому +198

    that was some great info Jason ...... will have to use the Sulfuric acid for specimen clean up next time we get more Gold from our mine....... you are right ....every ore is different and not one way will work for them all.....would love to see a video of you parting the silver out of the buttons. Thanks for coming out to our mine and making it one for the books,. See ya soon and take care.

    • @chaz2785
      @chaz2785 Рік тому +9

      Check out SREETIPS on UA-cam for info on chemical gold refining. Very useful information 👌

    • @signsofthetimes2971
      @signsofthetimes2971 Рік тому +5

      ​@@chaz2785 it would be very cool to see sreetips finish those buttons off.

    • @chaz2785
      @chaz2785 Рік тому +4

      @@signsofthetimes2971 yup sure would!

    • @Arachnos27
      @Arachnos27 Рік тому +3

      @@chaz2785 love sreetips

    • @coreymerrill3257
      @coreymerrill3257 Рік тому +4

      I know of one dude who uses a continuity detector to see if the gold veins are connected to each other in the rock . If they are, he sandblasts and acid treats to get the specimen on matrix.

  • @g-dcomplex1609
    @g-dcomplex1609 Рік тому +20

    jason, you absolutely right about trial and error in regards to learning the craft, and teaching the craft as well, even though i have 13 years experience under my belt, i'm still learning and watch your videos to learn even more, your work is appreciated, regards

    • @aaronstewart3570
      @aaronstewart3570 Рік тому

      When he's not repeating the Slave Book rubbish and observes things... Then records what he finds. He mainly just repeats the crap he learned. Nothing more. Copy and repeating aren't improving anything. Just making you all blind and stupid to stuff you ignore.

  • @stevezozuk9622
    @stevezozuk9622 Рік тому +3

    What a great opportunity that was for both of you . Thank you for taking us along on the original journey , that brought you to this end result , I love watching you do your thing . Especially for the convection cells that always trap my eyes into watching the formations . Great job Jason , see you soon . Cheers

  • @patbrown5168
    @patbrown5168 Рік тому +7

    It has been great to follow your work with Jeff's Ore. As an old retired engineer, it never gets old to see what the slag will look like on the different ores and different flux recipes.

  • @markg454
    @markg454 Рік тому +1

    Your experiments are worthy of the effort. I learn so much from your trials and errors. Keep them coming. We really get excited when we receive a notification of a new video.

  • @mrgreenswelding2853
    @mrgreenswelding2853 Рік тому +7

    It's good to see you do all these experiments, as lots of people don't have the money or resources to get everything to do them.
    Thanks to you and all involved!

  • @UtmostOutdoors
    @UtmostOutdoors Рік тому +6

    Thanks for sharing your experiments Jason! I'm really enjoying learning about smelting and hard rock mining, both things I've never done! Keep up the good work!

  • @nsa_surveillance_orb-42b
    @nsa_surveillance_orb-42b Рік тому +2

    I love your investigatory methods, and lessons learned, very insightful. See, that right there is an issue I now know how to resolve, or begin to resolve. Loved the specimen cleanup with all the chemical varieties, learned all kinds of stuff. Keep up the good work, loved the cooperative work with Jeff and all, but love your channel all on its own as well.
    Keep it up!

  • @EeekItsSnek
    @EeekItsSnek Рік тому +1

    I still can't get over how good of a sample those are. Huge specimens! Even for a hard rock mine, for today's day those are some beautiful specimens. Great stuff!

  • @hasmeadali7316
    @hasmeadali7316 Рік тому

    Thanks for the update.. I was actually waiting for it .. Much appreciated 👍😎

  • @TheMilwaukieDan
    @TheMilwaukieDan Рік тому +1

    This is exactly what I appreciate your work Jason…. It’s real learning and evaluation in process. Thank you for the honesty of the learning process.

  • @jeremywalker210
    @jeremywalker210 7 днів тому

    I love the experimenting and problem solving. And the explanation for each process. I understand the learning and your always open to suggestions. Love watching especially after a long day at work.

  • @alexnutu1125
    @alexnutu1125 Рік тому

    So awesome so informative and just badass! Loved seeing y’all work together

  • @erich9244
    @erich9244 Рік тому +1

    Awesome info Jason! Great experiments I love watching even if it "fails" Keep on keeping on.

  • @Schismarch
    @Schismarch Рік тому +2

    Really cool process. I love that you share the mistakes and what you learn. Looks like great fun!

  • @jbowerman50
    @jbowerman50 Рік тому +7

    Always interesting, wish I knew more about the chemistry end of what you do. I'm constantly researching something and just dont have enough megabytes left to fit much more in my cranium right now. But I'll get there, before I need to do my own smelting. Thanks Jason

  • @JimFinlayson
    @JimFinlayson Рік тому

    Jason, thanks for sharing your investigations. I have to say I really enjoy watching the slag freeze in the cone mold. I suggest a super slo mo of that in the future as a short. Keep the videos coming. They are some of my favorites.

  • @busbey61
    @busbey61 Рік тому +3

    Jason, you and Sreetips are very informative! I think a collab series with you and him using both of your methods would be beneficial for sure!

  • @KellDogg1965
    @KellDogg1965 Рік тому

    That was fun to watch! Thank you

  • @kencarbon2346
    @kencarbon2346 Рік тому

    enjoyed watching your video great work nice to see you try different methods of bring out the best specsmains of gold. I glad to see your explanation and experience and excitement working with gold ore.🤗

  • @BillMulholland1
    @BillMulholland1 Рік тому

    Was looking forward to this. Thanks Jason 🤝🍻👍

  • @Mdwells2944
    @Mdwells2944 Рік тому

    Live these videos, really neat to see the processes.

  • @ericbruns888
    @ericbruns888 Рік тому +1

    Great experience thanks J.

  • @kebin760
    @kebin760 Рік тому +4

    Gave you a like because you are not afraid to fail. Love all your videos! Keep it up!

  • @calebfast8088
    @calebfast8088 Рік тому +2

    I needed this exact video! Thank you! Love this channel. :)
    Been prepping to hit some of my own ore and trying to figure out what chemical is cheapest and easiest.

  • @joenewman6939
    @joenewman6939 Рік тому

    Good job on the close up shots perfect detail 👌

  • @raydowdy6914
    @raydowdy6914 Рік тому

    Awesome video guys. Really enjoyed every second of it.

  • @f.k.burnham8491
    @f.k.burnham8491 Рік тому

    Jason: I really find your videos quite interesting and educational. Thank You for making them.

  • @kristopheryoung9503
    @kristopheryoung9503 Рік тому

    Great videos! It was great meeting you Jason! I’m sure we all look forward to getting back down there! Was definitely an ausome time!

  • @joshuajackson6442
    @joshuajackson6442 Рік тому

    Jason thank you for the education! ❤❤❤

  • @rodneyhaley1734
    @rodneyhaley1734 Рік тому

    Wow what a great result I learnt heaps from you and Jeff Williams who I’ve been watching for a few years now

  • @ProspectorTripp
    @ProspectorTripp Рік тому +7

    Nice work Jason.
    I’m getting ready for some testing using pay dirt (high grade sample)
    I want to do exactly what you did to see if I recover additional gold by smelting the entire sample vs sluice running and panning.
    Thanks much sir!
    ✌️PT

  • @user-pe6cx4sw8r
    @user-pe6cx4sw8r 8 місяців тому

    Very Informative to acquire for beginner thank you I'm learning so much the videos from Jeff ,Dan Chris and yourself thank all

  • @lerkzor
    @lerkzor Рік тому +15

    It seems to me that a good method would be to combine mechanical methods (grinding / smelting) with chemical methods.
    Once you smelt and get all the metals into a cone, you could use pure chemistry. Nitric acid will dissolve all the copper, lead, silver, and perhaps other metals leaving the gold (and perhaps platinum group metals) behind as solids.
    Then using aqua regia (hydrochloric plus nitric) you can put the gold and PGMs in suspension. Adding a few drops of sulfuric acid will precipitate the lead, and after filtering you can use sodium metabisulfate (SMB) to precipitate the pure gold.
    If you are interested in getting into the chemistry side of things, pretty much the entirety of my armchair-expert knowledge comes from sreetips channel here on youtube.
    I enjoyed watching your video, what are you planning for next time?

    • @markpashia7067
      @markpashia7067 Рік тому +2

      I was also going to suggest sreetips possibly as another joint venture with these guys. Jeff dig it, Jason smelt it to a cone, and sreetips to chemically sort the metals out. Would be fun video series for all.

    • @lordeverybody872
      @lordeverybody872 Рік тому +2

      @sreetips is imho the best at separating precious metals. At least on yt

  • @surfinsilver
    @surfinsilver 3 місяці тому

    I'm looking forward to seeing the yield from this 😊, great video as always

  • @kurtbogle2973
    @kurtbogle2973 Рік тому

    I like your attitude. Honest and truthful.
    I'm more intrested in understanding how things are done myself.

  • @thomasbeltran5417
    @thomasbeltran5417 Рік тому

    Just a great segment 👍🏾❤️

  • @prodigalselect2421
    @prodigalselect2421 Рік тому +1

    Awesome work you guys have shared with all of us! Colorado here and thank you for the videos. I appreciate you guys. I could definitely use a small scale shaker system from you guys.😯

  • @ghostrider82599
    @ghostrider82599 Рік тому

    Youre so good at this. I always watch your vids. thanks!

  • @Boosted98gsx
    @Boosted98gsx Рік тому +7

    You really should spray some rigidizer on that exposed Kaowool. Those fibers get torn and blown around your shop when you fire your crucible, and can do some severe damage to your lungs.

  • @frankbyrd6726
    @frankbyrd6726 Рік тому

    This was a very fun video
    Thanks Jason !

  • @TheFrog767
    @TheFrog767 Рік тому

    Thanks for the hard work and information sharing 🖖👏👏👏🥂

  • @asjamuir5534
    @asjamuir5534 Рік тому

    loved the mini series on Jeff's ore

  • @gromageindustries6745
    @gromageindustries6745 Рік тому

    Wow I love your passion, tenacity and perseverance. Very engaging, well done fella. You inspired me to buy a gold pan to try my luck in some streams around my house in West Wales. I'll let you know how I get on.
    Good luck and all the best 🙏

  • @talldave1000
    @talldave1000 Рік тому

    Jason. not many people would show a failed experiment so i commend your honesty and integrity. Everybody makes mistakes. Anyway, you fixed them and pressed on. Great job and great video

  • @SilverScorpion
    @SilverScorpion Рік тому

    Super video. I would love to see it done both ways with the same sample to see which way is the best recovery. Thank you for doing this video

  • @mikeconnery4652
    @mikeconnery4652 Рік тому

    Good job a great video and a nice learning experience keep up the good work.

  • @danwells3401
    @danwells3401 Рік тому +1

    Hi Jason,
    Great video thanks! I've cleaned up a few specimens with acid and you really have to scrub them with warm water to get any acid residue off, to prevent yellow discolouration, soaking in a cup of water for 24 hours afterwards also helps!

  • @shaun4443
    @shaun4443 Рік тому

    Love watching these, thanks!

  • @TheMilwaukieDan
    @TheMilwaukieDan Рік тому

    Loving the science and evaluative math involved here. Of you aren’t experimenting we aren’t learning. Great job

  • @matthewmartinez1091
    @matthewmartinez1091 Рік тому

    Your videos are very informative you're smelting of sulfides has helped me very much as well as the dissolving of high grade iron ore to get to the gold. In one of your videos you used potassium nitrate as an oxidizer so I figured 🤔 high nitrate fertilizer would work the same and it did appreciate the info. Someday I'll have a way to thank you I have some major things in the works😁.

  • @hot_coldman
    @hot_coldman Рік тому +3

    Always fascinating to watch. We're so used to seeing the final product when it comes to gold. I would best most people think gold just pops out of the ground 100% pure and smelted.

    • @christopherfritz.bigsaving
      @christopherfritz.bigsaving Рік тому

      Ain't that the truth. I couldn't tell you how long I was even begining to think I was crazy. Or my eyes /ears /hands/nose/ and tongue/ were just plain off or different than every ones. Cause I'd see it in the rocks and feel it. Sense it with all of the senses and people I'd show wouldn't do anything but glance and say. You got gold fever. There ain't no gold in there. And at first I'd argue and most of them really didn't believe there was any gold in the rocks. But then one day it clicked. There ain't no gold in any rock. There ain't no gold in trees. There ain't no gold in water and there definitely ain't no gold your shit there ain't no gold in anything. So I should have just gave up looking I suppose. Lol. Report via comment next week with some that has gold in it though 🤪

  • @skoitch
    @skoitch Рік тому +4

    Been looking forward to this

  • @ericclayton6287
    @ericclayton6287 Рік тому +13

    If you’re dealing with quartz matrix you’ll have to use hydroflouric acid. It dissolves quartz but is nasty and dangerous to work with. It also dissolves glass.

    • @lotharschiese8559
      @lotharschiese8559 Рік тому

      Don't play with hydrofluoric acid, commonly used in pharmaceutical antidepressant medication fluoxetine (Prozac) and the material PTFE (Teflon).

    • @ericclayton6287
      @ericclayton6287 Рік тому +1

      I agree with Lothar but it is commonly used in mineralogical specimen preparation to dissolve guartz matrix around specimen gold and the rare showing of Pt. Pt almost never occurs in non ultramafic rock hence rarely associated with quartz.

    • @fredfarquar8301
      @fredfarquar8301 Рік тому +3

      I once had a quartz-and-gold nugget just under 1/4 oz; I placed it into a bottle of HF (Hydrofluoric acid) for several weeks. All the quartz was eaten up and left a beautiful gleaming gold nugget with tiny spires where it had penetrated the quartz. Even though the final weight of the gold was just a little less than 1/8 oz, I sold it for the price of 1/4 oz because it looked so nice.
      But yes, HF is nothing to fool with. Get it on your skin, and not only will you NOT feel any pain, it will continue to react with fat, muscle, and bone. People who have spilled it on themselves have had to had limbs amputated because the flesh and bone is dead and gangrene sets in. Unlike other acids or strong bases, it never lets you know when or what it is destroying until it’s too late.

    • @danvigue2238
      @danvigue2238 Рік тому +2

      sounds like this method should only be used in lab setting.....

    • @ericclayton6287
      @ericclayton6287 Рік тому +1

      Knowledge or research and due caution and lab skills are much more important than setting. In other words don’t be stupid. No hold my beer and watch this. There are numerous chemicals that for safeties sake need to be used in a fume hood for instance.

  • @Hawkeye2001
    @Hawkeye2001 Рік тому

    It's been a LONG time since High School Chemistry (50 years). I'm enjoying the process, even if I'm rusty on all the chemicals and their reactions. The failures are just as important and educational. Thanks.

  • @brucelonsdale8422
    @brucelonsdale8422 Рік тому

    Great work mate.

  • @jeffreyallen3796
    @jeffreyallen3796 7 місяців тому

    Nice Jason. I enjoy the videos and experiments.

  • @marsautoman
    @marsautoman Рік тому

    Always enjoy your experiments.

  • @dizzious
    @dizzious Рік тому

    Duuude! I love the Pb/kno3 method. Such a time saver. Cupelling takes forever.

  • @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751
    @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751 Рік тому +1

    Been a killer series. Very intriguing

  • @reaper121
    @reaper121 Рік тому

    Great Job!!! Make more videos, clearly your extremely knowledgeable and a very hard worker!!!

  • @daz41262010
    @daz41262010 Рік тому

    great testing Jason :) cool series of videos with Jeff's gold ore :)

    • @christopherfritz.bigsaving
      @christopherfritz.bigsaving Рік тому

      Can you do me a favor. Grab a book and look up some information. First what is the aw of electrical wire. Second. I'd look up the details on my favorite show in school. Same book. Her name was Xena worrior princess. Now following me still ok now look up wait wait wait. I got that wrong. The show. Had that one guy. He said. (Baby roof). Waht was that guy. Oh. Goonies. He said. (Oh aye you guys ). Following me. So wait this was a algebraic question. Or a movie comment. Oh shit. Never mind. I'm just gonna hit post please forgive me. It's not his fault. It's my vault. I'd like it to be full of more than knowledge I just give away

  • @williamcollins4082
    @williamcollins4082 Рік тому

    Watching you an your rocks brought back memories !!!

  • @rsaldivar4218
    @rsaldivar4218 Рік тому

    Hey there Jason, I’m sold on using Oxalic Acid! It’s the best for tough specimens.
    Used heavily for Quartz crystal mining… makes the gold pop. 👍🏼

  • @moneymarty1
    @moneymarty1 Рік тому

    Outstanding!

  • @avonneave2131
    @avonneave2131 Рік тому

    Really interesting collaboration with Jeff, Jason , excellent. I am aware that Jeff is very productive,so maybe we can hope to see more sometime soon. I figured any day now he'll be calling out for a jackleg , hopefully,lol. All the best regards Jason from here on the West Coast side of Australia 🌏🖖🙏🤟🇦🇺

  • @dewardtaylor4192
    @dewardtaylor4192 Рік тому

    What a video it was wonderful thanks Jason

  • @wayneriches9596
    @wayneriches9596 Рік тому

    Really interesting watching the process, Jason, or processes. Makes you appreciate nice alluvial gold even more, lol. But then, you get to play with some cool gear. Good onya 👍

  • @frantiseklaluch6605
    @frantiseklaluch6605 Рік тому

    Hi Jason, what a learning process... my first ever cupelling yesterday was... a disaster... I made a "cupel" out of MgO in small clay flower pot, MgO inside the pot cracked, gold microbeads are diffused in bismuth oxide cake... Well... I need to buy some good cupels... no so easy to make a good cupel...

  • @nicholasmcmillan7536
    @nicholasmcmillan7536 7 місяців тому

    I'm getting ready to meet Jeff Williams and do some work with him. Sure do love these videos. You should come on his mine rehab tour be cool to meet you. Spokane Washington

  • @scarlettardis2018
    @scarlettardis2018 Рік тому

    Love watching that awesome lava pattern in your pyramid mould

  • @keithwood6459
    @keithwood6459 Рік тому +12

    To keep it from turning green you need to neutralize the muriatic acid in the specimen by rinsing and putting in a solution with baking soda. Should neutralize all of them with appropriate agents.

    • @OpalholicsAnonymous
      @OpalholicsAnonymous Рік тому +1

      His poor fingers

    • @haphazard1342
      @haphazard1342 Рік тому +1

      He probably just rinsed with water, which would be enough to protect from burns but isn't enough to fully neutralize the acid in the rough rock surface.

  • @arnedalbakk6315
    @arnedalbakk6315 Рік тому

    Hello from Norway.
    Thank you Sir. I realy love this canal✨✨✨God bless you✨✨✨. And take care✨

  • @michiganprospectors
    @michiganprospectors Рік тому

    I like how you share both your success and your mistakes on video. I have a larger, DIY channel where I often show my mistakes or ask questions and get help from my viewers. We can all learn together this way.

  • @wilsonrawlin8547
    @wilsonrawlin8547 Рік тому

    That's not counting the gold in his specimens. Bear that in mind. Outstanding analysis and a great video. Jeff has a killer mine and I hope it just gets better and better for him.

  • @danielclayton7524
    @danielclayton7524 4 місяці тому

    Good video. Helps me a lot

  • @wittmannmichael777
    @wittmannmichael777 Рік тому +1

    Hey Jayson I know I said this before but I love you channel dude.
    Also I've just bought a load of books to do with smelting and gold and silver recovrey it's so interesting

  • @HenryHoffman
    @HenryHoffman Рік тому

    Good job brother i am now a subscriber of your channell ..picked u up at Mr. Dan Hurd the gold guru...he gave u a thumbs up for a reason ...God Bless both of you and all of us..

  • @joshuahildreth5529
    @joshuahildreth5529 Рік тому

    Nice video! Awesome tests. I haven't cleaned up much specimen gold, but have used the ultrasonic cleaner in combination with powerful cleaners to clean up copper parts and gold plated parts - the agitation really helps, maybe give it a go? May be risking the specimen breaking up?

  • @EvilKFC
    @EvilKFC Рік тому +41

    The type of cleaner you use depends on your ore type. Sulfuric acid is a strong oxidizing acid while muriatic/hydrochloric is just a strong acid and vinegar is just a dilute acetic acid. Your standard bleach is a weaker base than sodium hydroxide. Some metals will complex with hydroxides and redissolve or the hydroxide interrupts the passivation layer so that the sub-material can be oxidized. Sodium hydroxide is also one of the few things that can dissolve glass and by extension quartz.
    Side note, a lot of chloride compounds end up being a yellowish to green. My guess is when you exposed the sample from the muriatic to air, you were getting some additional oxidizing of the surface that had become passivated creating a mineral that was green.
    Hydrogen peroxide is also a strong oxidizer but it’s also unstable. So if there was a mineral in the ore that worked like a catalyst, you’ll get a lot of oxygen formation as the peroxide breaks down, but no real progress is made.
    Long story short, based on the results you have, my guess is that the ore needs additional oxidizing. First try swapping your sulfuric and Drano samples a couple of times to see if they work together to take away the unwanted material. If that doesn’t make much difference, I would try a stronger oxidizing acid like nitric. Even though you have the materials, I would advise against Caro’s acid, there’s a reason why they call it piranha solution in the lab environment.

    • @tzimmermann
      @tzimmermann Рік тому +3

      If I'm not mistaken, sufluric acid is a strong oxidizer only in concentrated form. In dilute aqueous solutions it dissociates, and can't form sulfurous acid and nascent oxygen (which is the actual oxidizer). It looks like he's using a concentrated solution as it comes from drain cleaner though, so I guess you're right.

    • @jakuborvos1575
      @jakuborvos1575 Рік тому +1

      HCL alone cannot dissolve gold, but if you have some oxidized manganese oxides in the ore, you can make chlorine in the juice and actually dissolve gold.

    • @EvilKFC
      @EvilKFC Рік тому

      @Terrence You are correct that sulfuric is a strong oxidizing acid. I think there’s some additional uses in this case (like the swapping between acid and base).
      A couple things to note when working with sulfuric acid: There are inhibitors in drain cleaning sulfuric acids so that it doesn’t dissolve your pipes, that has me wondering if they’re at work here. You do need some water to dissolve any salts that form, which is why you typically don’t see fuming acids used very often (besides their other dangerous side effects). Lastly, most sulfate salts aren’t very soluble and sulfuric acid is used in high purity gold refining to drop out heavy metals, which might be decreasing its effectiveness here.
      I’m curious about nitric acid as all nitrate salts are soluble. One thing I left out in my original comment is that you should start with dilute solutions of nitric acid as I believe it can dissolve or create a fine dispersion of your gold if the karat is low.

    • @aaronstewart3570
      @aaronstewart3570 Рік тому

      Take your time. It's not at all Rare for a professional REE fossicker Like myself to sit a bucket in multiple Natural chemicals for months. These morons are in a hurry to lose heaps so they rush like fools would. Hence the so small amounts they get. Facts. But the re-tards called me crazy...??? lmao, Autistic isn't crazy. It makes me a genius in my specialized field. Earth.

    • @aaronstewart3570
      @aaronstewart3570 Рік тому

      @@jakuborvos1575 I use that, the gold runs out with the water. There is a mix of 3 natural chemicals that do the same but takes longer. I discovered it. Less toxic.

  • @sagarugolden3798
    @sagarugolden3798 Рік тому

    Thank for information stone gold,, nice job

  • @jackmclane1826
    @jackmclane1826 Рік тому

    You can put in old cupels with some charcoal to new smelts whenever you would add lead as collector metal. A great inline recycling method beneficial on many points. No waste to take care of, no additional lead needed, saves money, time, labor... awesome!

  • @PoorMiners321
    @PoorMiners321 Рік тому

    wow nice job brother very good experiment i learn someting deferent on your video thanks for your effort.

  • @ChefVProspecting
    @ChefVProspecting Рік тому

    Great video series

  • @auguys
    @auguys Рік тому

    Hey Jason been watching for years get most of my knowledge and inspiration from your video's, so thank you!! I know your goal is to get to a specimen. With or without matrix? If you want to leave some host rock or go all the way to no rock, I had success with Molten Lye(sodium hydroxide)you decide when to stop but you really have to babysit the project! However, it works very well!

  • @rockymountainlifeprospecti4423

    Awesome stuff Jason!! It's been awesome seeing you all together! Wishing you all the best. And id say the the H2o2 would work well , hopefully not destroying anything precious.

  • @landofsaguaros8330
    @landofsaguaros8330 Рік тому

    Excellent!

  • @irlans2042
    @irlans2042 Рік тому

    Amazing stuff. 👍

  • @matthewdroz5613
    @matthewdroz5613 Рік тому +1

    Great video!

  • @Ligo-uh9gh
    @Ligo-uh9gh Рік тому

    Hey Jason! My husband and I are huge fans! We have been prospecting for over a year and we appreciate your experimenting and showing your adventures through your expertise! We live in Colorado and have come across some very rich ore, and veins that look abandoned. We would love to send you some of our materials, and see what you think about it. If possible, do you have email or other contact information you can share with me so we can get your expertise on what we have come across? Thank you for all you do for us to learn from!
    Lisa and Lee

  • @mogwopjr
    @mogwopjr Рік тому

    I wish I could give two thumbs up, I love the E&E (Education and Entertainment) Thanks! A big part of life is messin around trying to figure things out and having a good time doing it, thanks for sharing your adventures :)

  • @rideshareafterdark5827
    @rideshareafterdark5827 Рік тому +5

    A piece of cardboard will prevent the crucible sticking to the firebrick. Learned that one on Bigstacked's channel. :-)

  • @StephenBecker
    @StephenBecker Рік тому +4

    Give oxalic acid a try! I've used it to clean iron oxides off of quartz points before, worked great....everything was completely white/clear when it came out after an extended soak.

  • @tomcook5813
    @tomcook5813 8 місяців тому

    My auto shop teacher had a mine at Cerro Gordo California, he taught me Muratic acid method, I find it fascinating the different waysyiur covering. Hello Mr Robert Desmarais if your out there

  • @jonnyrocker7919
    @jonnyrocker7919 Рік тому

    Thank you

  • @jdeluisa
    @jdeluisa Рік тому

    Nice job Jason

  • @seymourpro6097
    @seymourpro6097 Рік тому

    I was shown round a rock analysis lab once. Each sample coming in was crushed to about 2 mesh then coned and quartered, then one quarter was crushed again, coned and quartered again twice more, then the final quarter was analysed. All to make sure that the test sample was representative of the sample from the mine.

  • @NEO-RC
    @NEO-RC Рік тому

    Immensely interesting!! How many uses can you get out of the crucibles one the lead is absorbed? Are they a one time use kinda thing?
    Excellent excellent video! Learned a lot but have so much more to learn. Have yet to attempt smelting but would like to. The biggest cost for me is the crusher. Couple grand for a little one makes it a little out of reach for a hobbyist.

  • @WagonLoads
    @WagonLoads Рік тому

    What if you ground everything to a fine powder and run it through a sluice?
    Also, I think it would look nice to make jewelry out of a mix of that black glass and gold..
    Is that black glass you got, the same material black sand gold panners find gold in?

  • @MarksGoneWicked
    @MarksGoneWicked Рік тому +1

    I've seen meminer get some good results on dissolving calcite with various methods. Stuff like white vinegar may take a couple weeks to do the job, where muriatic acid might take a few days to a week.