Jason, After cutting the slabs just put them into a kitchen dish washer. Add a little extra soap. The slabs come out really clean and dry. And no oil residue is left in the machine! It works really great and you don’t have to use any toxic chemicals to boot!
I have an 8" slab saw and cabbing machine combo. I also use mineral oil as a lubricant. I find that using a blue huck cotton rag works great to get the majority of the oil off. If you have several different rags, you use the one with the most oil first, then another. Also. You can reuse the mineral oil. You just drain your saw well into a container and let it sit for a month or so. The pure mineral oil will separate and form a clear layer on top.
That microscope for the phone is actually pretty awesome, I would definitely recommend purchasing one. Another recommendation is run those slab pieces on a flat surface over wet dry sand paper with water. Go from 800 grit up through 5000 grit after that you will have a near mirror finish.
I know nothing of all this. So curious. How would one go about processing this to get the gold out and about how much gold would it be. Can you make any money from those amounts
you get a ball milling machine, grind these quartz rocks into dust, run a chemical process (the simplest one is to use mercury, which you can get for free from cinnabar mineral if you light it with UV light) and get the gold. However this business is tied to commodity prices and gold fever increases with every rise in gold price. But as world is entering an economic depression, selling commodities becomes very bad business (ask gold producers in year 2002) because during crisis nobody needs assets, you need cash (which in global economy is US dollar because central banks must have it in their reserves no matter what). You will do better if you invest in knowledge, like knowing how to process ores, basic chemistry, basic machining, and stuff like that. Gold has a price, but knowledge is invaluable, specially in the age of information.
Run concrete blocks through the saw every few cuts to treat the blade and increase cutting efficiently and blade longevity. -From a stone fabricator. I dont know how or why it works, but it works.
highland park recommends tapping along the blade with a file to break the glaze. the concrete will wear the soft diamond matrix in lapidary saws suuper fast
I believe it is called Dressing the blade. When I made silicon wafers we used 220 and 400grit stones for dressing. You could also control the direction of the cut or straightness of the cut just by blade dressing on one side or the other.
If your "new toy" has the capability to cut 1/8inch slabs or thinner to allow the passage of light through them to see the gold, you can sell them as cut and polished "specimens" for way more than the gold value in them. Just a thought.. Chris.
this video reminds me of some samples of marble i was given a few years ago that was brought from a site for sale in nigeria, i think the site had marbles, quarts and kaolin..and maybe some other minerals, either ways, i was shown alot of gold veins in the marbles..and prior to that i did not know gold could grow in between marble..your video jst confirmed this.. thanks, for the insight
The curiosity of exploring and learning comes out great In your videos. We have a similar chalcopyrite mix on the taconic zone of Massachusetts into Vermont. There seems to be a theme there as gold is found with Chalcopyrite and copper in this region.
Oh yes indeed, I have seen rusty quartz veins like that here in NJ, deep in the hills up north along a series of ridges known for having unusual minerals in one location. There are bands of material scattered all about with confirmed pyrrhotite and hydrothermal quartz filled with hematite grains. I know where they are, and just need to get time enough to sample them!
Thank you for uploading these videos . Could you do a video of you crushing up your furnace slags and then, panning them out, to see how much gold might be still in them ? Thank you.
I soak cut rocks in a degreaser solution for a week or so and then place them in an oven to cook off the oil. rock will not take a polish with oil still in the rock.
Hi Jason, Your new toy is doing a great job! You'll learn all the do's & don'ts with the saw as you use it more. After about 30 cuts - put a house brick or piece of a cinderblock in the saw and cut about one inch. This will clean out the garbage in the blade & sharpen the exposed diamonds. The kitty liter will work better if the rocks sit in it for a day or two. Good Luck on eBay!! Thumbs up! Stay safe. Jim
@@mbmmllc How much powdered rock comes off as a byproduct of cutting those slabs? Once you have a bucket or two of it, it'd be worth while to run it through the shaker table..
I am glad you seem to be having fun with your new equipment! It seems that the rock saw is one that Dan Hurd had (I may be wrong). Is it hard to keep the saw cleanish?
High school chemistry, add a small amount of liquid dish detergent. Drop it on the rock and work it and the oil with a small brush - even an old tooth brush. Scrub until it looks milky. Then add hot water, and scrub. Effectively you are turning the oil to a water soluble substance as it combines with the detergent.
Where should gold move to when it’s being laid down under heat when it’s melted? Does it go to the bottom as it does when smelting? If so would that define the foot wall location when looking at a specimen?
Man, all you do is run up and down that mountain getting ore. Jason: " I will take this this this that those and these". "MB to base over, "India-Golf-Golf, send the chopper" Helicopter guy: "That's a good copy, Echco-Romeo out" I mean damn, I want to play! Put me in coach , put me in!! Thanks for the amazing shares Jason! Keep up the great work!
Jason when I was working in a papermill we used a small camera to see defects in the paper that had a USB for a computer or lap top so I bought one for home use it was pretty cheap and goes to 1600X and can take stills and by using the lap top or computer you get a way bigger screen than a phone not so handy for the woods but would be great for your shop.
Jason, thanks for your comments that visible gold occurs in ribbon rock or in the latest deposition age vein quartz, adacent to wallrock, in rusty red or orange colored quartz...
Great content. I just found your channel from searching for gold in quartz. I was doing some quartz hunting up near Mariposa County Ca this morning and just interested in what i was brining home. Alot of valuable information, my son and I appreciate it.
Along the hanging wall, haven't it had more time to redisseminate out pure. While further in was still forming as the process repeated along the first to be deposited on the wall of the crack it was hanging on.
Did you buy the microscope without the CPL filter or the one with the filter? I wonder if that is why you are having problems with the light without the filter.
سلام جیسون خوبی، من بیش از 100 تن از این نوع سنگ و سنگهای پیریت طلایی دارم که درصد طلاشون خیلی بالاس، سنگ پیریت دارم خالص طلاس و اصلأ ناخالصی نداره فقط نمیدونم چجوری استخراجشون کنم، لطفأ راهکارشو بهم بگو چجوری طلاهاشونو استخراج کنم
Arent you ever gonna process that stuff? Lots of totes with ore there, would love to see all that processed sometime. Some pretty ore for sure! Thanks for creating content and videos for us wanna be rock hounders, we live vicariously through your many adventured. Peace Happy hounding!
i think saw dust does a better job than kitty litter to remove the oil, as you can just burn the saw dust after wards, but you might still need to still wash it off
That first one you cut with all the specs at the bottom, is that considered a lot of gold? I ask because where I live, we have various rock quarries and I have fairly often found quartz mixed into driveway gravel with about as much gold specs. Always thought it was pretty but figured it must not have been worth much since they literally use it for driveway gravel lol. To the best of my knowledge, there are no active and producing gold mines anywhere near me. There are some gold claims but nothing apparently producing.
This may be a dumb question but I've been known to ask a few so . . This stuff from your helicopter mission looks gorgeous. . . Is there money in say pre-cut countertops for vanities or table tops etc etc or even tile sized or disk shaped pieces that have visible gold in them? I would imagine that such a non typical item would fetch some serious cash from those who want to be able to say " That's Actually made out of Real Gold Ore"
@@arte9855 That was my first thought as well... But then I saw that piece he cut the book ends from. Tile sized pieces add up to large square footage and he has the saw to cut those or he could find a fabricator who does. Not all ore is as inaccessible or logistically as difficult as that piece was. Some ore deposits could be economical if there was a market out there. I don't know if there would be a market for such material. Thats why I asked.
That kind of rock doesn't have the competence to become a counter top. There are too many internal fractures and softer mineral lineations within it. It WOULD make awesome coasters that people would pay good money for.
@@rockbutcher that's what I instantly thought when he mentioned bookends, some of those slabs would make for some pretty cool coasters or maybe even knife handles.
Yeah... You are right. There is a reason that when a person says they want a "Quartz" countertop, that the salespeople pull out manufactured solid surface samples
What frequency was the year of the gold rush The mines? Does the environment have to be an out side or like a diamond coated in carbon peanut butter or Dr. Pepper? Sorry for silly question
I would suggest removing the oil with Acetone Vapour Deposition. Basically hang the rock on a wire in a container with heated acetone vapours. Great for cleaning metal parts and other things as well.
Hello my new friend. I have rocks similar to what you have on your show and I was wondering where exactly can I take them and Cash in? My mortgage is behind almost $10,000, I live in Tucson Arizona. Thanks for bringing this to our attention.
You might want to invest in a small digital stage microscope. I bought one when I was selling coins on eBay and it paid for itself within a few months, my customers were complimenting me on the quality of my pics. I'm sure one would do the same for your videos.
looks like you could snap the edge that is impregnated with t he gold off, or cut deep enough along there to remove it all and square up the rest to sell as cut dimensional stone to pay for all the effort and the gold then just become a freebie.
Looks like it's time for an assay. That silvery metal could be electrum or any number of salts of metal and arsenic, or example. Very interesting video. If the tiny specks of gold were all the gold it contains, all you have, then, is simply an interesting looking rock. I certainly do agree that this specimen has far more value as a display piece (bookend, for example) than going to all the work to process out its meager gold values, unless, of course, that silvery metal happens to be electrum.
Interesting question once you find it how do you get it out of the rock. Never looked into the rocks have found some gold dust in Maine. Not much but I found it with a cheap meal detector. The Land is on a river now a highway at the bottom of the hill but I think that it probably has gold in the river I know 30 miles away there is a silver mine years ago.
Have you seen his other videos? Jason is the owner/operator of MBMMLLC and they offer a wide variety of ore-processing solutions including a complete turn-key ore-processing plant: jaw crusher, shaker table, de-watering screw for removing tailings…. Check out his turn-key ore processing plant videos to see how he extracts the gold. Also, he’s a metallurgist and smelts his own gold too.
That is a Lortone LS18. Lortone started production in 1978. They made the LS18 model up until about 2010 when production went to Highland Park Lapidary Co.. They continue to make that model and sell it as the 18" Slab Saw; price $5,097.00.
Is this typical size of gold in gold ore found presently? I’m guessing finding actual larger nuggets of crystalline gold growing in quartz is a rarity?
I mean it's not impossible to find higher values in ore, it just depends on the conditions in the rock when forming. Record nuggets have got to come from somewhere right?
Jason, After cutting the slabs just put them into a kitchen dish washer. Add a little extra soap. The slabs come out really clean and dry. And no oil residue is left in the machine! It works really great and you don’t have to use any toxic chemicals to boot!
Damn fine suggestion.
@@dionh70 Spock says that is quite logical.
I bet an old used restaurant dishwasher would work really well
I thought about doing that but then I thought about all the gold I would be losing in the dishwasher so I changed
@@kendradawn369depending on the dishwasher you came make your filter even more filter-savey with a coffee filter 😅
I have an 8" slab saw and cabbing machine combo. I also use mineral oil as a lubricant. I find that using a blue huck cotton rag works great to get the majority of the oil off. If you have several different rags, you use the one with the most oil first, then another.
Also. You can reuse the mineral oil. You just drain your saw well into a container and let it sit for a month or so. The pure mineral oil will separate and form a clear layer on top.
That microscope for the phone is actually pretty awesome, I would definitely recommend purchasing one. Another recommendation is run those slab pieces on a flat surface over wet dry sand paper with water. Go from 800 grit up through 5000 grit after that you will have a near mirror finish.
I'm into coin collecting and really interested by this kind of product, would make spotting certain things so much easier.
Thank you kindly.
I know nothing of all this. So curious. How would one go about processing this to get the gold out and about how much gold would it be. Can you make any money from those amounts
you get a ball milling machine, grind these quartz rocks into dust, run a chemical process (the simplest one is to use mercury, which you can get for free from cinnabar mineral if you light it with UV light) and get the gold. However this business is tied to commodity prices and gold fever increases with every rise in gold price. But as world is entering an economic depression, selling commodities becomes very bad business (ask gold producers in year 2002) because during crisis nobody needs assets, you need cash (which in global economy is US dollar because central banks must have it in their reserves no matter what). You will do better if you invest in knowledge, like knowing how to process ores, basic chemistry, basic machining, and stuff like that. Gold has a price, but knowledge is invaluable, specially in the age of information.
Run concrete blocks through the saw every few cuts to treat the blade and increase cutting efficiently and blade longevity. -From a stone fabricator. I dont know how or why it works, but it works.
Wouldn't that dull the blade? 🤔
highland park recommends tapping along the blade with a file to break the glaze. the concrete will wear the soft diamond matrix in lapidary saws suuper fast
I believe it is called Dressing the blade. When I made silicon wafers we used 220 and 400grit stones for dressing. You could also control the direction of the cut or straightness of the cut just by blade dressing on one side or the other.
11:17 😊@@jackkonnof4106
Thanks for the info. I have the exact same saw. Bought mine at an estate auction. $15
If your "new toy" has the capability to cut 1/8inch slabs or thinner to allow the passage of light through them to see the gold, you can sell them as cut and polished "specimens" for way more than the gold value in them. Just a thought.. Chris.
I have tons of quartz but we also have a lot of pyrite in this area. When looking at a specimen like this how can you tell the difference?
this video reminds me of some samples of marble i was given a few years ago that was brought from a site for sale in nigeria, i think the site had marbles, quarts and kaolin..and maybe some other minerals, either ways, i was shown alot of gold veins in the marbles..and prior to that i did not know gold could grow in between marble..your video jst confirmed this.. thanks, for the insight
Which reminds me too that I have seen. This is some parts of Kenya 😂 little did I know that it's gold traces
For us with limited knowledge of minerals, could you explain what it means to hydrate?
Awesome.
That saw has opened a view into prospecting that I had never seen.
So my question is all the yellow in the quartz what is that? Could you use hydrogen peroxide after powdering the quartz to recover very fine gold?
The curiosity of exploring and learning comes out great In your videos. We have a similar chalcopyrite mix on the taconic zone of Massachusetts into Vermont. There seems to be a theme there as gold is found with Chalcopyrite and copper in this region.
Oh yes indeed, I have seen rusty quartz veins like that here in NJ, deep in the hills up north along a series of ridges known for having unusual minerals in one location. There are bands of material scattered all about with confirmed pyrrhotite and hydrothermal quartz filled with hematite grains. I know where they are, and just need to get time enough to sample them!
Thank you for uploading these videos .
Could you do a video of you crushing up your furnace slags and then, panning them out, to see how much gold might be still in them ?
Thank you.
What a great new toy. Will be fun to see what colour can be recovered from the filter sludge when you finally need to clean out the oil.
I soak cut rocks in a degreaser solution for a week or so and then place them in an oven to cook off the oil. rock will not take a polish with oil still in the rock.
Hi Jason, Your new toy is doing a great job! You'll learn all the do's & don'ts with the saw as you use it more. After about 30 cuts - put a house brick or piece of a cinderblock in the saw and cut about one inch. This will clean out the garbage in the blade & sharpen the exposed diamonds. The kitty liter will work better if the rocks sit in it for a day or two. Good Luck on eBay!! Thumbs up! Stay safe. Jim
Thanks for the tips!
@@mbmmllc You're welcome, Jason.
@@mbmmllc How much powdered rock comes off as a byproduct of cutting those slabs? Once you have a bucket or two of it, it'd be worth while to run it through the shaker table..
love your vids, learning allot. can you go deeper in how to know if it's gold or fool's gold
How do you get the gold out of the slab?
I am glad you seem to be having fun with your new equipment! It seems that the rock saw is one that Dan Hurd had (I may be wrong). Is it hard to keep the saw cleanish?
Thanks you for sharing this way you are the best ideas sir,
Once you factor in the cost of the extraction from the quartz is this still profitable?
High school chemistry, add a small amount of liquid dish detergent. Drop it on the rock and work it and the oil with a small brush - even an old tooth brush. Scrub until it looks milky. Then add hot water, and scrub. Effectively you are turning the oil to a water soluble substance as it combines with the detergent.
Fantastic video. Very interesting. Love what you do Buddy.
Where should gold move to when it’s being laid down under heat when it’s melted? Does it go to the bottom as it does when smelting? If so would that define the foot wall location when looking at a specimen?
Thank you. Best video that I’ve seen on showing up close what to look for!
Thank you for sharing your experience with us
First-time to know what happens and how Thank you again
How do you confirm that the microscopic gold isn't pyrite or chalcopyrite?
Man, all you do is run up and down that mountain getting ore.
Jason: " I will take this this this that those and these". "MB to base over, "India-Golf-Golf, send the chopper"
Helicopter guy: "That's a good copy, Echco-Romeo out"
I mean damn, I want to play! Put me in coach , put me in!!
Thanks for the amazing shares Jason! Keep up the great work!
It would be awesome to get some thick gold baring quartz counter tops made!
Ahh, spring in Whatcom County! Reminds me of my childhood. Rock sawing gold ore is an awesome idea
Jason when I was working in a papermill we used a small camera to see defects in the paper that had a USB for a computer or lap top so I bought one for home use it was pretty cheap and goes to 1600X and can take stills and by using the lap top or computer you get a way bigger screen than a phone not so handy for the woods but would be great for your shop.
Where can I find the microscope your talking about?
Jason, thanks for your comments that visible gold occurs in ribbon rock or in the latest deposition age vein quartz, adacent to wallrock, in rusty red or orange colored quartz...
Do you have a good recommendation in Colorado
Try really hot soapy water. I use a heavier concentration of plain sunlight and it really helps pull the grease and oil out of automotive parts
Great content. I just found your channel from searching for gold in quartz. I was doing some quartz hunting up near Mariposa County Ca this morning and just interested in what i was brining home. Alot of valuable information, my son and I appreciate it.
Please may I know how I can understand If their is golden in my place like is their any machine that I can use?
Along the hanging wall, haven't it had more time to redisseminate out pure. While further in was still forming as the process repeated along the first to be deposited on the wall of the crack it was hanging on.
Did you buy the microscope without the CPL filter or the one with the filter? I wonder if that is why you are having problems with the light without the filter.
سلام جیسون خوبی، من بیش از 100 تن از این نوع سنگ و سنگهای پیریت طلایی دارم که درصد طلاشون خیلی بالاس، سنگ پیریت دارم خالص طلاس و اصلأ ناخالصی نداره فقط نمیدونم چجوری استخراجشون کنم، لطفأ راهکارشو بهم بگو چجوری طلاهاشونو استخراج کنم
Hi Jason, I just walked an old Copper mine and have some ore samples I would like to smelt down. Do you have a flux recipe for copper ? Thank you, M
with the blade going that fast, how many cuts do you normally get from a single diamond saw blade?
I'm a few minutes into video and all i can think about is that i hope we get to see you pan out the small stuff inside the cutter box.!
What kind of material the white rock, sir? I wonder... Because i cant identify the different between marble and quartz
I could not find a link to the saw... Any other saw recommendations?
Arent you ever gonna process that stuff? Lots of totes with ore there, would love to see all that processed sometime. Some pretty ore for sure!
Thanks for creating content and videos for us wanna be rock hounders, we live vicariously through your many adventured.
Peace
Happy hounding!
I liked seeing the plants starting to grow in the bags waiting for processing! 😂
Do you keep the shavings from the cuts and pan them?
Thx for posting!! Great samples..appreciate your time to make this!
How do you get the gold out from the rocks???
Hi Jason, I am interested to know about your gold wash plant.
Doesn't appear to be enough for refining correct??
I wonder how many rocks you're going to cut to make it worth refining the cooling oil for all the gold that's in there
Simple green will clean those up nicely
Is it possible to extract the tiny dust particles of gold? If so, how?
i think saw dust does a better job than kitty litter to remove the oil, as you can just burn the saw dust after wards, but you might still need to still wash it off
That first one you cut with all the specs at the bottom, is that considered a lot of gold? I ask because where I live, we have various rock quarries and I have fairly often found quartz mixed into driveway gravel with about as much gold specs. Always thought it was pretty but figured it must not have been worth much since they literally use it for driveway gravel lol.
To the best of my knowledge, there are no active and producing gold mines anywhere near me. There are some gold claims but nothing apparently producing.
Where do you get o saw like that
Nice saw! Great video. Are you going to smelt the sawdust?
This may be a dumb question but I've been known to ask a few so . .
This stuff from your helicopter mission looks gorgeous. . .
Is there money in say pre-cut countertops for vanities or table tops etc etc or even tile sized or disk shaped pieces that have visible gold in them?
I would imagine that such a non typical item would fetch some serious cash from those who want to be able to say
" That's Actually made out of Real Gold Ore"
Could you Imagine the equipment cost and logistics to quarry out a countertop slab off the mountain side... you'd need some deep pants pockets
@@arte9855
That was my first thought as well...
But then I saw that piece he cut the book ends from. Tile sized pieces add up to large square footage and he has the saw to cut those or he could find a fabricator who does.
Not all ore is as inaccessible or logistically as difficult as that piece was.
Some ore deposits could be economical if there was a market out there. I don't know if there would be a market for such material.
Thats why I asked.
That kind of rock doesn't have the competence to become a counter top. There are too many internal fractures and softer mineral lineations within it. It WOULD make awesome coasters that people would pay good money for.
@@rockbutcher that's what I instantly thought when he mentioned bookends, some of those slabs would make for some pretty cool coasters or maybe even knife handles.
Yeah...
You are right. There is a reason that when a person says they want a "Quartz" countertop, that the salespeople pull out manufactured solid surface samples
What frequency was the year of the gold rush
The mines?
Does the environment have to be an out side or like a diamond coated in carbon peanut butter or Dr. Pepper?
Sorry for silly question
FASCINATING!! THANK U FOR SHARING!!
I saw Van Gough in those book ends right when you first showed them..😮
Great video Jason. Great looking samples.
use dawn dish soap its designed tp repeal oil, good stuff
Is the gray color silver? I would really like to know.
I would suggest removing the oil with Acetone Vapour Deposition.
Basically hang the rock on a wire in a container with heated acetone vapours.
Great for cleaning metal parts and other things as well.
Hello my new friend. I have rocks similar to what you have on your show and I was wondering where exactly can I take them and Cash in? My mortgage is behind almost $10,000, I live in Tucson Arizona.
Thanks for bringing this to our attention.
This is totally awesome man thanks buddy 🙏
How do you sell stuff like this? I got a whole bunch of red and pink and black granite with gold flakes and quartz
How much gold do you think you will end up with in the bottom of the saw?
Loại đá có chứa bụi vàng này máy dò gold monter 1000 có bắt được không bạn?
Lol that's funny, a bunch of gold. Then cuts to bags and bags, ♥️ it. Can't wait to see more 😊
I Need help with ore that runs at 3 1/2 oz per ton need set up with equipment
I like your rock saw, you're giving me ideas. Thanks Jason.
You might want to invest in a small digital stage microscope. I bought one when I was selling coins on eBay and it paid for itself within a few months, my customers were complimenting me on the quality of my pics. I'm sure one would do the same for your videos.
Thanks Jason for teaching us about gold bearing ore
Hey bud where are getting those ore bags from
Put a board under the rock to clear the hub. It's a rookie learning thing.
You are doing great...
looks like you could snap the edge that is impregnated with t he gold off, or cut deep enough along there to remove it all and square up the rest to sell as cut dimensional stone to pay for all the effort and the gold then just become a freebie.
Are all gold veins in between a foot wall and a hanging wall?
There are tons of hand held microscopes that connect to the phone. I love mine. I look at everything with it.
Cool. I need a bigger saw. I have some gold ore . I found. Lots of sulfides and chunks of pyrite.
Looks like it's time for an assay. That silvery metal could be electrum or any number of salts of metal and arsenic, or example. Very interesting video. If the tiny specks of gold were all the gold it contains, all you have, then, is simply an interesting looking rock. I certainly do agree that this specimen has far more value as a display piece (bookend, for example) than going to all the work to process out its meager gold values, unless, of course, that silvery metal happens to be electrum.
18 inch saw is not going to cut 9 inch, you have to allow for the flange diameter which for that saw is about 4 inches.
That's so dang cool!
Why is water not used as a lubricant?
Your sound is coming through the right channel more than the left in recent videos, maybe check your pan in the final edit.
Cutting rocks is so much fun. I don't know if you're the artistic type, but making cabochons is pretty fun too.
Cabochons?
@GruvenHaus it's a stone cut for jewelry. Dome top, usually oval shaped, no facets
Awesome stuff you doing. You getting it. Smart and very inventive. Love all your stuff
I want to know how to gold search in Red Soil underground. Pls reply me.
Thank you Jason, excellent learning tutorials! Happy Father’s Day! Dan Brent
Interesting question once you find it how do you get it out of the rock. Never looked into the rocks have found some gold dust in Maine. Not much but I found it with a cheap meal detector. The Land is on a river now a highway at the bottom of the hill but I think that it probably has gold in the river I know 30 miles away there is a silver mine years ago.
Have you seen his other videos? Jason is the owner/operator of MBMMLLC and they offer a wide variety of ore-processing solutions including a complete turn-key ore-processing plant: jaw crusher, shaker table, de-watering screw for removing tailings….
Check out his turn-key ore processing plant videos to see how he extracts the gold.
Also, he’s a metallurgist and smelts his own gold too.
What would you charge a fella for two ten inch by ten inch by two inches thick, and two 3 by 10 by half inch thick
This was neat to watch
Jason would you mind telling me as to what year this rock saw was made? I'm guessing sometime in the early 1920's?
That is a Lortone LS18. Lortone started production in 1978. They made the LS18 model up until about 2010 when production went to Highland Park Lapidary Co.. They continue to make that model and sell it as the 18" Slab Saw; price $5,097.00.
@3:48 I had the impression of seeing the planet Jupiter through a telescope...
Now do you take your dust in your saw and get the gold out of that too?
Worth panning the slurry from the cutting table
Cool little gadget and if you find a really nice rock maybe Dan Herd can get that sphere maker to make a sphere for you.
It would be cool if you could do one inch cubes and polish them up.
Wouldn't the gold be a lot easier to spot if those slices were much thinner and allowed more light to enter
Is this typical size of gold in gold ore found presently? I’m guessing finding actual larger nuggets of crystalline gold growing in quartz is a rarity?
I mean it's not impossible to find higher values in ore, it just depends on the conditions in the rock when forming. Record nuggets have got to come from somewhere right?