I am a jeweler and prospector of many years. I have a magnet trick too. Put the magnet inside a plastic bag. Run it over your material. Invert the bag over the material. Remove the magnet. Now all the magnetic material is in the bag and the magnet is clean. Makes for easier clean up.
I've been watching Sreetips do this for literal years and I still hear him say "I'm just a know-nothing novice who is experimenting." Even a garage scientist is a scientist. I'm a high school chemistry teacher and I've literally shown my students these videos to try to get them interested in the activity series.
You done right. If you want to rise students interest to knowledge, show them how to use it, and better prove that using knowledge they can get profit.
That’s very humbling. I wish I had more chemistry knowledge. Be nice to be able to explain what’s going on at the the molecular and atomic level in my beakers.
@@sreetips Learning by doing is a good way to go, sir, but teaching others adds a powerful catalyst to the reaction. Humility in your approach is good, but be proud of your efforts in educating us. It's a big win-win, and that's worthy of praise. Teaching science in a way that entertains and engages people isn't exactly common, you know. Edited to add that I'm the son of a science teacher, and a damn good one. He kept his students engaged, and while he was less entertaining, otherwise, you remind me of being in his classes. You also don't remind me of him outside the classroom, and trust me, that's good. The context of the reaction is situation, which is why you use nitric boils, rather than putting it all in a freezer. But I appreciate your efforts here.
I so love this channel. I’m having a bit of a time right now. My employer is letting me go. However, I’ve had so many good memories of Sreetips executing his craft even on a night like tonight, I’ve got somebody out there doing good and being kind enough to bring me joy. Even if the day is bad, I know in the back of my mind that Sreetips is excellent.
I really appreciate all of your comments. I hope I didn't take away from Sreetips' video. That's why we're here, right? That said, you folks have been extremely supportive. I appreciate that more than you know.
I've learned so much watching your videos over the years. So much so. I melted up a bunch of my silver crystals that I've harvested from my silver cell. I had to pull out and use my postal scale because the overall weight in the 4 silver bars was 6lbs 2.9oz. Now it's time to melt up some cement silver and start the whole process over again. Thank you Sreetips for the step by step knowledge in refining precious metals. Have a wonderful holiday season. God bless...
As a metal refiner and Copper smith I love the use of copper. If you can get the copper free enough of contaminants, when it comes to the buffing stage, it just looks like a precious metal itself! So no calling copper ugly, It make me money over here in South Wales UK! 👍
I was curious how long I have been watching you do your thing so I scrolled back in your videos and it has been 4 years that I have been a regular viewer of your channel. You do such a great job with your videos that I find them to be informative, relaxing and just plain fun to watch. Thank you for all the hard work you put into them! I for one really appreciate it.
"pour a little more nitric acid" Is Sreetips version of Bob Ross's "happy little friend". What you do is an artform in and of itself. I should have studied more as a kid so I could afford to do what you do.
Thanks for the great content once again Sreetips, I was thinking one could use copper for inquartation, and now thanks to you, I've seen it with my very own eyes!! Beautiful work as always!
I’ve thoroughly enjoyed your page. It reminds me of my work at Ullenberg. We refined hundreds of kilos of karat gold daily. I noticed that you have a few borax glazed crucibles. We used to clean them with diluted sulphuric acid in an ultrasound. They came out clean and useable again. I know this is a minor savings but every dollar counts.
They sell a shallow stainless steel pan for bolts at harbor freight. It has a magnet in the bottom, and works great for separating tiny pieces of ferrous and non ferrous metal
Fumes, fire, danger of other fun stuff that makes life interesting...blah blah. Thanks for your content I've read dozens of books played with fire for decades and you have helped bring things together by far on understanding. Thank you!
I had this problem with borax the other day. I let the molten metal harden and focused my flame on the borax with the crucible on a 65-70 degree angle and it poured out just fine. The metals stayed still too, and as a precaution, i did this over a bucket of cold water in case the metal fell out. Evenetually, enough borax came out and i vibrated it when the metal was molten and it unstuck, allowing the borax to settle on the bottom again
Very interresting. Because more easy to find copper than silver for this kind of purification process. Thanks a lot for time spent to this. Best regards. Sylvain
Those first boils would be removing all your Pd and any plated Rh or Pt, as well as Cu and Ag. I'm thinking all those bright flecks ARE Rh or Pt. Conceivably, those flecks could be plated Cr. If that's the case, you'd have also taken off the plated Ni under the Cr, into your filtered solution. 'Sure looks ugly' - Sreetips That layer that formed might be the gradient difference between very low pH and near neutral pH. That gray filter paper makes me think 'PGM'. Thanks to you returning that filter paper to the initial melt, from that first precipitation after the HNO3 boils, you returned them to the raw Au. Good job!
You’re welcome! Thank you Sir, for tossing the change up! A very “Cubrik”-style production…A Clockwork Rosegold?… .996 Metal Jacket? As a gringo, I’m going to stay away from the tequila sunrise…for me, that has international incident written all over it. Keep firing them out, I’ll get to them when the datos allows. 👍👍🤙
Sreetips, nice job, it begs the question just how many methods are there to successfully skin this feline? This is excellent for the folks that do not live near a Dell web community to pick up some unwanted silver. I sure hope you have been able to monetize your video library...it seems vast.
Very nice video. Great job 👍🏻 I was wondering if you’ve found any advantages to making AR with sulphuric rather than hcl? - also you should really look at making nitric acid yourself, its hell of a lot cheaper and you’ve already got everything for it 🙂
I think my favorite part is watching that dark cloud of precipitate rolling around. Almost looks like it's boiling under the gold solution in some of you other videos at high purity and super saturation.
Thank you sir I was wondering how that would work out with copper and know I see why you use silver outstanding video great content thank you for sharing this with us six stars brother
The stump out stuff you add, is it a pre determined amount depending on the weight of scrap or it’s just by eye and knowledge you get to know about how much each individual batch?
inquarting with copper is awesome to see work so well. the concept of inquarting seemed unreachable to those without a stash of silver... now its very obtainable. what other metals are possible?
I'd have to say copper boils where looking a bit nasty but that solution cleared up nice. It seemed to have more fine gold particles then usual too. Thanks for posting.
Wow, turned out great for "junk gold".. The jeweler will surely love what you did here! One defining an copper inquartation.... beautiful well done Sir as always ✌🏼💗😊👩🏼🔬
Copper works fine to inquart the thing is that 1. Copper takes twice as much nitric acid to dissolve compared to an equal mass of silver. 2. Silver is very easy to cement out and re-use, copper can be reduced back to metal either by electrolysis or by the addition of ascorbic acid. How ever its more work and is harder to separate from any other base metals that are present.
Yeah nice video. You can say you where making it up while you went but it looked like a plan to me. Good way to solve an unknown. Good choice also to inquart with electric wiring. That's usually electrochemically refined copper and the purest source of Copper on the market. I think you should really dig into molar mass calculations. It's not hard once you see it, but hey I'm watching you for the hands on expierience :).
Great video! Different again. I suggested this process a few videos ago and I guess you were already planning it! Unfortunate about the melt dish and borax incident, but a good lesson on what you have to watch for with molten borax. Did that happen because you used too much borax, or was it timing, or some other reason?
I do this when i feel like i am not in a rush. I process it through my stockpot but i still have to hit it after with some nitric to remove any silver that is in it as the Hcl in the stockpot wont remove the silver. Saves on chemicals but time wise it takes a while.
ive wondered what his arrangements are too....its probably very difficult to estimate how much gold will come out of the sweepings....unless he buys them for a low price....or charges a fee to refine the sweeps no matter what comes out of it....and he's got video proof he isnt cheating anyone...
Another refiner I watch on UA-cam uses an ammonia boil after the HCL cleaning, post precipitation. It really seems to clean up the gold mud just that little bit more. Is it something you've heard of or have considered?
Silver chloride is soluble in boiling ammonia. But of all the corrosives liquids I work with, ammonia is something a try not to use, especially hot ammonia.
Ammonia has a pH of 43, where the normal range from strong acid to strong base is 0 to 14. Nasty stuff as a real chemical, not to be confused with the dilute solutions in your kitchen cabinet used for cleaning, etc.
It’s crazy to think that just one ounce of gold could save me from losing my home and 11 acres. I am a disabled veteran on a fixed income and these last couple years have been tough. I have sold my tractor and everything else I can but I have been falling farther behind because of the higher cost of things. Taxes and heating oil for the winter have put me in a tough spot and if I could somehow scrape together an ounce of gold I would be in a good place. 🤔 🙏
Can I ask for safety what is the best respirator to use for this. I'm nervous about vapors , I'll be doing it outside till I can build a hood in my garage . Would a 3m chemical filter respirator work please and thank you
Hi Sreetips, excellent refining as usual,thanks for using the copper method. What are the little plastic squirty bottles called? Does anyone know the correct term?
Wow copper sucks I see why you use silver...still content like this from you is awesome it really shows why what you normally do is the best way! Keep it up!
I’ve done it in previous videos. But the lenses on the camera I’m using (iPhone 11) has some of the best picture quality at any light that I’ve seen. Especially close ups.
Another excellent video Sir Sreetips! Was cool to see you inquart with copper, but I think I will continue to use Silver. Silver seems to be quicker, cleaner and is easier on the Nitric. Question for you please. How do you clean your porcelain Buchner Funnel? I worry about contaminates or residue being trapped under the perforated bottom of the funnel. Thank you for all you do!
I use a small brush bent to get in there with some alconox. With acidic solutions there’s not much residue if you clean then immediately after use. I have put them in a large beaker then boil some aqua regia and let it sit in those fumes. This usually takes care of any junk in there. But it’s hard to tell because can’t see inside. Another option it two-piece plastic Büchner funnels.
@@sreetips Thank you for the direction. Very appreciated! I need to get a new one and practice better Buchner hygiene. I only have one and if Sir Sreetips seen it, he would probably smack me and say shame on you! I really lean towards the porcelain funnels as opposed to the plastic, but I think I will get a couple plastic too. Thanks again!
So the nitric acid, ive bee. Some studying on nitric, the nitric you use will not start your gloves on fire if you get it on them? Must be the lesser concentration?
If someone wanted to cut back on nitric acid usage, could they inquart with copper and then use boiling HCL to remove copper? I'm pretty sure there would be somethings that the HCL wouldn't remove, like silver, but after the HCL boiling, could you then use a nitric acid to remove final contaminates from gold. Thus, saving a lot of nitric acid? I've used .925 with inquartation and sulfuric acid boils and the gold came out beautiful, I just hate using boiling sulfuric acid. I was just wondering if copper and HCL for the bulk of it and then thoroughly wash, rinse and then small nitric boil to save money.
Thanks Mr. Tips! I was one who wanted to see the copper inquartation, and it was interesting. Doesn't seem to have any advantage over using silver - just higher nitric use and doesn't leave you with as much feedstock for your silver cell. I'm guessing the higher than expected yield was because the button was somewhat higher than 14k when you tested.
Copper is easier to obtain, just run down to the hardware store and get some copper wire. Any impurities in the copper tends to increase electrical resistance, so copper wire is about as pure as you can get.
@@drtidrow Electrical copper is electrowon just like Sreetips' pure silver crystals. The slimes from those huge cells are a primary source of commercial silver.
Hi Sreetips, I respect the process you have learned. I understand why you inquart the gold with a more reactive metal. Have you considered a manual process of flaking the gold and immersing the flakes in very strong aqua regia?
hey sreetips, i've been wondering: what happens if you try to boil down the filtered aqua regia? surely the gold will not evaporate along with the water and acid, will it?
Would acetic acid and hydrogen peroxide be effective for pulling the copper out of the inquarted gold? Or would this be too slow because of the silver?
I wonder which method works out cheaper? More nitric used but no silver needed, don't have to recover that More energy + time invested though Also, would doing fewer but larger volume boils change much? What would a BIG BOIL do?
Hey sreetips quick question what's the difference between adding smb straight into the gold solution and adding it to distilled water to dissolve it before adding it.
You zoomed in on that melt dish and a lot of stuff is stuck to the side of it. Would it make sense to put those dishes into some Aqua Regia to take off any metal that might be in there? The same goes for all the stuff on and around your melt table. You got work bench sweepings too.
Which is more expensive, mr Sreetips? Nitric acid or silver? Also, by adding that silver boil nitric at the beginning didn't you reintroduce some silver into the gold?
@@TechneMoira I refine silver also. So using silver, instead of copper, makes more sense. The first step in refining silver is to dissolve it in nitric. So why not use it to inquart.
Hey sreetips I have a question for u thought maybe u could help me out I have a bar of pure silver and karat gold weight is 57.64 grams should I use just copper to inquart with it to start my refining project and if so about how much copper should I use?
@sreetips is there a certain ratio of copper to silver? Because goofed up and I had 5 grams of pure gold 8 grams of natural gold flakes from paydirt and so many grams of pure silver shot witch totaled 57.64 grams well I can't get the nitric acid to brake it down now🙄 lol and I'm sorry to bother u but if anyone would know what to do it is u
I am a jeweler and prospector of many years. I have a magnet trick too. Put the magnet inside a plastic bag. Run it over your material. Invert the bag over the material. Remove the magnet. Now all the magnetic material is in the bag and the magnet is clean. Makes for easier clean up.
That's awesome!!! Just tried it! Thanks!
I've been watching Sreetips do this for literal years and I still hear him say "I'm just a know-nothing novice who is experimenting."
Even a garage scientist is a scientist.
I'm a high school chemistry teacher and I've literally shown my students these videos to try to get them interested in the activity series.
You done right. If you want to rise students interest to knowledge, show them how to use it, and better prove that using knowledge they can get profit.
That’s very humbling. I wish I had more chemistry knowledge. Be nice to be able to explain what’s going on at the the molecular and atomic level in my beakers.
And now ... I'm...
Going to add
A lil nitrate
@@sreetips Learning by doing is a good way to go, sir, but teaching others adds a powerful catalyst to the reaction. Humility in your approach is good, but be proud of your efforts in educating us. It's a big win-win, and that's worthy of praise. Teaching science in a way that entertains and engages people isn't exactly common, you know.
Edited to add that I'm the son of a science teacher, and a damn good one. He kept his students engaged, and while he was less entertaining, otherwise, you remind me of being in his classes.
You also don't remind me of him outside the classroom, and trust me, that's good. The context of the reaction is situation, which is why you use nitric boils, rather than putting it all in a freezer. But I appreciate your efforts here.
@@sreetips You should reach out to @NileRed and see if he'd be interested in doing a collab.
I so love this channel.
I’m having a bit of a time right now. My employer is letting me go.
However, I’ve had so many good memories of Sreetips executing his craft even on a night like tonight, I’ve got somebody out there doing good and being kind enough to bring me joy.
Even if the day is bad, I know in the back of my mind that Sreetips is excellent.
Chin up, here's to you landing an even better job! 🍻
shucks you're getting let go... hoping for better news for ya over the next few days.
✌️♥️🍺
Maybe this is a chance to find a new job with better opportunities. Keep your head up, embrace the suck and good things will come.
I really appreciate all of your comments. I hope I didn't take away from Sreetips' video. That's why we're here, right?
That said, you folks have been extremely supportive. I appreciate that more than you know.
I've learned so much watching your videos over the years. So much so. I melted up a bunch of my silver crystals that I've harvested from my silver cell. I had to pull out and use my postal scale because the overall weight in the 4 silver bars was 6lbs 2.9oz. Now it's time to melt up some cement silver and start the whole process over again. Thank you Sreetips for the step by step knowledge in refining precious metals. Have a wonderful holiday season. God bless...
Excellent, refining your own metal is gratifying.
Gooood evening from central Florida! Hope everyone has a great night!
Goooood evening!
As a metal refiner and Copper smith I love the use of copper. If you can get the copper free enough of contaminants, when it comes to the buffing stage, it just looks like a precious metal itself! So no calling copper ugly, It make me money over here in South Wales UK! 👍
I appreciate that you show the different methods of refining gold. It is always great to see when you upload a new video.
I was curious how long I have been watching you do your thing so I scrolled back in your videos and it has been 4 years that I have been a regular viewer of your channel. You do such a great job with your videos that I find them to be informative, relaxing and just plain fun to watch. Thank you for all the hard work you put into them! I for one really appreciate it.
"pour a little more nitric acid" Is Sreetips version of Bob Ross's "happy little friend".
What you do is an artform in and of itself. I should have studied more as a kid so I could afford to do what you do.
This video knocked me out, and now that I'm awake and can't fall asleep, I'm going to watch this again.
Another awesome refining! Definitely enjoyed seeing you use the copper this time around. That bar poured nicely 👌🏼Thanks again Sreetips! You da man👍🏼
Thanks for the great content once again Sreetips, I was thinking one could use copper for inquartation, and now thanks to you, I've seen it with my very own eyes!! Beautiful work as always!
I LOVE watching you melt and pour the gold. Beautiful!!!
Very interesting! Nice result as usual! Thought it was going to take more boils with the copper but still did it in 5! Nice twist!
I’ve thoroughly enjoyed your page. It reminds me of my work at Ullenberg. We refined hundreds of kilos of karat gold daily. I noticed that you have a few borax glazed crucibles. We used to clean them with diluted sulphuric acid in an ultrasound. They came out clean and useable again. I know this is a minor savings but every dollar counts.
Good tip, I’ll give it a try.
Always great to watch this process. Great looking bar, too. Thanks for sharing.
Sreetips is cranking out the videos! Thanks for all the great work. Bars look great!
Dude I have been watching you for awhile and I've watched some of these numerous times..you are educational and entertaining..thanks buddy
Hey thank you for answering my question about copper and the constants on your other video and super happy you did a video after using copper
They sell a shallow stainless steel pan for bolts at harbor freight. It has a magnet in the bottom, and works great for separating tiny pieces of ferrous and non ferrous metal
Fumes, fire, danger of other fun stuff that makes life interesting...blah blah. Thanks for your content I've read dozens of books played with fire for decades and you have helped bring things together by far on understanding. Thank you!
Liked that you used copper instead of silver this time. Probably got a better yield due to it being more then 14k. Thank you for the content!
@𝐓𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦 𝐦𝐞@Sreetips1 Sreetips is this fake?
I had this problem with borax the other day. I let the molten metal harden and focused my flame on the borax with the crucible on a 65-70 degree angle and it poured out just fine. The metals stayed still too, and as a precaution, i did this over a bucket of cold water in case the metal fell out. Evenetually, enough borax came out and i vibrated it when the metal was molten and it unstuck, allowing the borax to settle on the bottom again
im loving the first person shots with the gopro, i love how the channel is always getting better and better... keep it up my man
Copper a nice twist I hadn't thought of using that thank you for doing something new with it always giving me good ideas have a blessed night
Nice to see the inquartation process with copper. Worked out great! Used more HNO3
Very interresting.
Because more easy to find copper than silver for this kind of purification process.
Thanks a lot for time spent to this.
Best regards.
Sylvain
Those first boils would be removing all your Pd and any plated Rh or Pt, as well as Cu and Ag. I'm thinking all those bright flecks ARE Rh or Pt.
Conceivably, those flecks could be plated Cr. If that's the case, you'd have also taken off the plated Ni under the Cr, into your filtered solution.
'Sure looks ugly' - Sreetips
That layer that formed might be the gradient difference between very low pH and near neutral pH.
That gray filter paper makes me think 'PGM'. Thanks to you returning that filter paper to the initial melt, from that first precipitation after the HNO3 boils, you returned them to the raw Au.
Good job!
Thankyou for renewing my love of chemistry :)
Looking forward to the silver cell time lapse. Hope that for the effort of setting it up, it turns out well.
I was watching another sreetips video, and was actually going to ask this exact question - if you could inquart with only copper. Thanks for this one!
You’re welcome! Thank you Sir, for tossing the change up! A very “Cubrik”-style production…A Clockwork Rosegold?… .996 Metal Jacket? As a gringo, I’m going to stay away from the tequila sunrise…for me, that has international incident written all over it. Keep firing them out, I’ll get to them when the datos allows. 👍👍🤙
Wow that is unreal I thought that was just pure trash When you started on all that scrap gold great job sir
Sreetips, nice job, it begs the question just how many methods are there to successfully skin this feline? This is excellent for the folks that do not live near a Dell web community to pick up some unwanted silver. I sure hope you have been able to monetize your video library...it seems vast.
Another long day of stacking lumber and concrete…rounded out with a new Sreetips video!! Niiicceeeee!!!!
Very nice video. Great job 👍🏻 I was wondering if you’ve found any advantages to making AR with sulphuric rather than hcl?
- also you should really look at making nitric acid yourself, its hell of a lot cheaper and you’ve already got everything for it 🙂
que gusto verte trabajar , se agradece que compartas tus conocimientos , gracias ¡
Gracias!
That loaf was hidden in that junk, amazing again Mr. Sreetips!
Very cool, your videos keep me going. Keep 'em coming as much as you can Sreetips!
That was fascinating to see you using copper to inquart the gold. Such a pretty gold bar at the end. 👍
Copper is actually better than silver because less silver chloride to deal with.
Thanks for sharing your experience
I think my favorite part is watching that dark cloud of precipitate rolling around. Almost looks like it's boiling under the gold solution in some of you other videos at high purity and super saturation.
I have no means to set up an operation like this. But, it's a lot of fun to watch. Great videos - cool channel - thanks for sharing 👍
Thank you sir I was wondering how that would work out with copper and know I see why you use silver outstanding video great content thank you for sharing this with us six stars brother
The stump out stuff you add, is it a pre determined amount depending on the weight of scrap or it’s just by eye and knowledge you get to know about how much each individual batch?
I’ve refined at least a thousand ounces over the years. I’m just going by my experience.
Just curious which way do you like to do the silver with the copper or with the electric Silver cell I myself think I like the copper
I cement the silver on copper. Then melt it, pour into shot, then run it through my silver cell
Very nice bar Mr sreetips I do enjoy watching your vids I think at some point I will try this. I do so like the color of silver and gold
inquarting with copper is awesome to see work so well. the concept of inquarting seemed unreachable to those without a stash of silver... now its very obtainable. what other metals are possible?
I'd have to say copper boils where looking a bit nasty but that solution cleared up nice. It seemed to have more fine gold particles then usual too. Thanks for posting.
Wow, turned out great for "junk gold".. The jeweler will surely love what you did here! One defining an copper inquartation.... beautiful well done Sir as always ✌🏼💗😊👩🏼🔬
Love watching ur videos thanks for makin them
Wel done, another stellar video. Thank for sharing
God bless you
Thank you very much
Thanks, I enjoyed your video, very interesting.
Thanks for another great video. 👍
Beautiful bar! 😊
Copper works fine to inquart the thing is that 1. Copper takes twice as much nitric acid to dissolve compared to an equal mass of silver. 2. Silver is very easy to cement out and re-use, copper can be reduced back to metal either by electrolysis or by the addition of ascorbic acid. How ever its more work and is harder to separate from any other base metals that are present.
Yeah nice video. You can say you where making it up while you went but it looked like a plan to me. Good way to solve an unknown. Good choice also to inquart with electric wiring. That's usually electrochemically refined copper and the purest source of Copper on the market. I think you should really dig into molar mass calculations. It's not hard once you see it, but hey I'm watching you for the hands on expierience :).
Excellent video thank you 😊
The overhead cam view is awesome.
Great video! Different again. I suggested this process a few videos ago and I guess you were already planning it! Unfortunate about the melt dish and borax incident, but a good lesson on what you have to watch for with molten borax. Did that happen because you used too much borax, or was it timing, or some other reason?
The gold froze after the borax. Breaking the melt dish happens sometimes.
I do this when i feel like i am not in a rush. I process it through my stockpot but i still have to hit it after with some nitric to remove any silver that is in it as the Hcl in the stockpot wont remove the silver. Saves on chemicals but time wise it takes a while.
So when you do this for the jewler, do you get a percentage from it? Just curious. I love watching the reactions.
ive wondered what his arrangements are too....its probably very difficult to estimate how much gold will come out of the sweepings....unless he buys them for a low price....or charges a fee to refine the sweeps no matter what comes out of it....and he's got video proof he isnt cheating anyone...
@@getprobed838 He does keep the silver. So that might be payment. But prob a percentage I would guess.
Just guessing but it would make allot of sense that Sree Tips gets % considering the cost of nitric acid /time but maybe not.
He accepted 90%
Wow, POV camera was awesome, sir, you should do this more often, even whole process, at least once. Greetings from Poland.
Bravo, that bar flowed great with extra heat. Less layers. You did get a green flame at start of melt was copper burning off
Another refiner I watch on UA-cam uses an ammonia boil after the HCL cleaning, post precipitation. It really seems to clean up the gold mud just that little bit more. Is it something you've heard of or have considered?
Silver chloride is soluble in boiling ammonia. But of all the corrosives liquids I work with, ammonia is something a try not to use, especially hot ammonia.
Ammonia has a pH of 43, where the normal range from strong acid to strong base is 0 to 14. Nasty stuff as a real chemical, not to be confused with the dilute solutions in your kitchen cabinet used for cleaning, etc.
@@EfficientRVer Yeah I'm aware of the difference.
39:25 I loved the light from your fume hood shining threw the gold solution, beautiful.
It’s crazy to think that just one ounce of gold could save me from losing my home and 11 acres. I am a disabled veteran on a fixed income and these last couple years have been tough. I have sold my tractor and everything else I can but I have been falling farther behind because of the higher cost of things. Taxes and heating oil for the winter have put me in a tough spot and if I could somehow scrape together an ounce of gold I would be in a good place. 🤔 🙏
Can I ask for safety what is the best respirator to use for this. I'm nervous about vapors , I'll be doing it outside till I can build a hood in my garage . Would a 3m chemical filter respirator work please and thank you
I use 3MP95 but that won’t filter gas. If you look at the safety data sheet for nitric, it says to use full face with fresh air supply.
these jumbled up piles of metal are my favorite videos!
Hi Sreetips, excellent refining as usual,thanks for using the copper method.
What are the little plastic squirty bottles called?
Does anyone know the correct term?
Just wash bottles when I was at school, many moons ago!
The time lapse of the sorting made a tedious process really interesting to watch!
Wow copper sucks I see why you use silver...still content like this from you is awesome it really shows why what you normally do is the best way! Keep it up!
Would welding Glass over the camera lens during the meting steps make the process more visible?
I’ve done it in previous videos. But the lenses on the camera I’m using (iPhone 11) has some of the best picture quality at any light that I’ve seen. Especially close ups.
Yo sreetips I was wondering about brass and gold mixed will nitric take out brass from gold
Please see my gold filled recovery videos. It’s a thick coating karat gold over brass.
Nice work Sreetips..
Great vid...
its remarkable how much quieter your new fume hood is.
I love it!
Love seeing different ways to enquart like that. Great video and very nice bar. 👏
Great video as usual! Just wondering if one could, in theory, boil off the copper since it boils at a lower temp than gold? Thx.
Probably not
Another excellent video Sir Sreetips! Was cool to see you inquart with copper, but I think I will continue to use Silver. Silver seems to be quicker, cleaner and is easier on the Nitric. Question for you please. How do you clean your porcelain Buchner Funnel? I worry about contaminates or residue being trapped under the perforated bottom of the funnel. Thank you for all you do!
I use a small brush bent to get in there with some alconox. With acidic solutions there’s not much residue if you clean then immediately after use. I have put them in a large beaker then boil some aqua regia and let it sit in those fumes. This usually takes care of any junk in there. But it’s hard to tell because can’t see inside. Another option it two-piece plastic Büchner funnels.
@@sreetips Thank you for the direction. Very appreciated! I need to get a new one and practice better Buchner hygiene. I only have one and if Sir Sreetips seen it, he would probably smack me and say shame on you! I really lean towards the porcelain funnels as opposed to the plastic, but I think I will get a couple plastic too. Thanks again!
I like that you incourted the gold with copper it was cool to see you use other metal then silver keep up the good work
So the nitric acid, ive bee. Some studying on nitric, the nitric you use will not start your gloves on fire if you get it on them? Must be the lesser concentration?
According to some, fuming nitric acid 95% will cause nitrile gloves to ignite (but I’ve never tried it). I use 68% to 70% nitric.
@sreetips thank you for the response sreetips
Will white gold and rose gold disovle in dilute nitric or is it exactly like yellow gold?
Exactly like yellow gold.
If someone wanted to cut back on nitric acid usage, could they inquart with copper and then use boiling HCL to remove copper? I'm pretty sure there would be somethings that the HCL wouldn't remove, like silver, but after the HCL boiling, could you then use a nitric acid to remove final contaminates from gold. Thus, saving a lot of nitric acid? I've used .925 with inquartation and sulfuric acid boils and the gold came out beautiful, I just hate using boiling sulfuric acid. I was just wondering if copper and HCL for the bulk of it and then thoroughly wash, rinse and then small nitric boil to save money.
I think that would be more trouble.
Thanks Mr. Tips! I was one who wanted to see the copper inquartation, and it was interesting. Doesn't seem to have any advantage over using silver - just higher nitric use and doesn't leave you with as much feedstock for your silver cell. I'm guessing the higher than expected yield was because the button was somewhat higher than 14k when you tested.
14.5k - using copper has one advantage, less silver chloride to have to deal with.
Copper is easier to obtain, just run down to the hardware store and get some copper wire. Any impurities in the copper tends to increase electrical resistance, so copper wire is about as pure as you can get.
@@drtidrow Electrical copper is electrowon just like Sreetips' pure silver crystals. The slimes from those huge cells are a primary source of commercial silver.
@@johnblair8146 Didn't mention that because I was on my tablet - typing on a tablet is a pain. 🙂
Hi Sreetips, I respect the process you have learned. I understand why you inquart the gold with a more reactive metal. Have you considered a manual process of flaking the gold and immersing the flakes in very strong aqua regia?
No
Happy holidays to you and your wife buddy
Same!
hey sreetips, i've been wondering: what happens if you try to boil down the filtered aqua regia? surely the gold will not evaporate along with the water and acid, will it?
Yes, it will. If evaporated to dryness it will form orange chunks of chloroauric acid.
Would acetic acid and hydrogen peroxide be effective for pulling the copper out of the inquarted gold? Or would this be too slow because of the silver?
Probably wouldn’t have the punch.
I wonder which method works out cheaper?
More nitric used but no silver needed, don't have to recover that
More energy + time invested though
Also, would doing fewer but larger volume boils change much?
What would a BIG BOIL do?
Small volume boils are best.
Did the liquid from dilute nitric look grody because of the copper or because it was jeweler's scrap?
Definitely copper. It’s very ugly due to oxidation. Nothing like precious metals, gold and silver.
That has to do with how many electrons are in the valence shell of
copper
Omg. What a peace . Beautiful 😍🥰
Hey sreetips quick question what's the difference between adding smb straight into the gold solution and adding it to distilled water to dissolve it before adding it.
You can filter the solution.
Thank you sir
Good video and nice to see you change it up by using copper
Sreetips, have you thought of filtering the waste before you refine a second time or melting it?
No
Sou do Brasil, quais as químicas que você usa?
Parabéns pelo trabalho
Mostly hydrochloric acid, nitric acid and stump out (sodium metabisulfite). Plus a little sulfuric to precipitate lead.
You zoomed in on that melt dish and a lot of stuff is stuck to the side of it. Would it make sense to put those dishes into some Aqua Regia to take off any metal that might be in there? The same goes for all the stuff on and around your melt table. You got work bench sweepings too.
It’s mostly borax, gem stones, and junk from the melt.
Which is more expensive, mr Sreetips? Nitric acid or silver? Also, by adding that silver boil nitric at the beginning didn't you reintroduce some silver into the gold?
Nitric is $60 per 2.5 liter bottle. Silver is about $22 per ounce.
Copper is 24 cents per ounce, wouldn't it be cheaper to refine gold with copper, even if you need more nitric to dissolve it?
@@TechneMoira I refine silver also. So using silver, instead of copper, makes more sense. The first step in refining silver is to dissolve it in nitric. So why not use it to inquart.
Hey sreetips I have a question for u thought maybe u could help me out I have a bar of pure silver and karat gold weight is 57.64 grams should I use just copper to inquart with it to start my refining project and if so about how much copper should I use?
I’ve used copper to inquart.
@sreetips is there a certain ratio of copper to silver? Because goofed up and I had 5 grams of pure gold 8 grams of natural gold flakes from paydirt and so many grams of pure silver shot witch totaled 57.64 grams well I can't get the nitric acid to brake it down now🙄 lol and I'm sorry to bother u but if anyone would know what to do it is u