Silver Cell Harvest EXTRA LARGE CRYSTALS

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
  • eBay link: www.ebay.com/i...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 424

  • @Alondro77
    @Alondro77 Рік тому +18

    Our groundwater in south Jersey is very acidic, and actually keeps silver highly polished... while being able to totally dissolve copper! I've found 70's pennies tossed into flowing streams that were eaten to thin wafers within a few years, eaten away so evenly that the Lincoln relief and year were still visible. The copper-zinc ones after 1982 are totally destroyed in a mere 6 months. And from the wet sand, I've dug up silver dimes that looked like they just fell there yesterday.

  • @ThorTubeview
    @ThorTubeview Рік тому +1

    One word !
    Wow.
    Those extra large crystals are just magical are masterpiece of nature.
    Awesome and enchanting.
    Thanks to you to expose that.
    Best Regards,
    Sylvain

  • @heyscotttt1024
    @heyscotttt1024 Рік тому +4

    Greatest content on UA-cam - would love to hear more about the cost of sourcing when your wife brings stuff back.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +2

      She paid a tenth of what this was worth. She’s amazing.

  • @ricknelson947
    @ricknelson947 Рік тому +5

    The Timelapse of the silver cementing out is just mesmerizing to watch.

  • @tonydalton6756
    @tonydalton6756 Рік тому +6

    Those crystals are just beautiful.

  • @Stetsonhatman
    @Stetsonhatman Рік тому +9

    Those are extraordinarily large - I'd like to see them on black cloth. I saw on another channel that lower voltage = lower current made for larger crystals but yours were well beyond that size. Beautiful.

    • @Realtor_Rion
      @Realtor_Rion Рік тому

      Yes black background just like the jewelry stores.

  • @jeffholmes1362
    @jeffholmes1362 Рік тому +1

    Just beautiful. It’s been good to watch the development of the silver cell over the years, work’s brilliantly, always great to watch silver cementing and crystals growing

  • @paulknight1879
    @paulknight1879 Рік тому +2

    Your silver cell is amazing love watching u clean it out and c all the crystals in the bowl. Love your channel all of what u do fantastic job 👏 👍

  • @rhenderson9234
    @rhenderson9234 Рік тому +27

    Have you thought about trying to seal your silver crystals in some of the resins such as flowers and insects are sealed?
    Just a thought, if it would work it might help others enjoy the beauty of the crystals.

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 Рік тому +7

      It probably is a good idea. A big crystal is worth a lot more than it's weight in metal to collectors.
      Fun thing is that Mr Sreetips is not even trying to grow big crystals. The day he does well... I'll be here to watch and learn ! :)

    • @dirtybayadventures9563
      @dirtybayadventures9563 Рік тому +2

      Good idea

    • @khanacknowledge7604
      @khanacknowledge7604 Рік тому +2

      I also thought about that.

    • @apveening
      @apveening Рік тому

      Glad to know I wasn't the only one thinking about that.

    • @sirbatracius
      @sirbatracius Рік тому +2

      I thought about some resin if you want to do something permanent. If you want to protect them when shipping, I would use candle wax. Should be easy to remove.

  • @jimwednt1229
    @jimwednt1229 Рік тому +1

    Thank you Sreetips for sharing your refining processes.
    That silver crystal is more beautiful than the finest .999 silver I've seen .

  • @anthonyrstrawbridge
    @anthonyrstrawbridge Рік тому +2

    First thought was that the crystal structure deposited on the stainless bowl is aesthetically pleasing. That said, I wondered if the bowl could be fitted with a light source to create a beautiful lamp or a ferry led light globe. It is difficult to convey impressions of natural art and wealth I've experienced in emporiums at Ouray, Aspen, Vail, Telluride and to a lesser extent Durango and Grand junction, Co. I once experienced a tree knot bowl called a Burl turned epoxied and polyurethaned into a very high value thing to possess and display. Odd how money changes appreciation of what is.
    Just beautiful. ,✌️♥️👍👍👍 Thank you for sharing. Make it great day.

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 10 місяців тому

      I know that if you get the electrolyte (silver nitrate, when fresh) on your skin, paper, or fingernails it will turn to a white spot (silver oxide?). When you expose the spots to bright light, such as walking outside into the daylight, they will turn a brown/black color right in front of your eyes. The skin/nail was destroyed to a shallow depth the moment it reacted with the silver nitrate, but once it turns black, you' have this black spot that will be there until the affected skin/nail is replaced with new dead cells.
      The point is: Wear gloves, protective clothing, be careful
      To your idea though, I'm curious if such a light (which would need to be blue/cool-white... This video does not begin to do justice to the crystals he's displaying, because he's using warm-white) would denature some of the silver in solution, or alter how it deposits into the crystalline structures. Crystallography is a fascinating field of study.

  • @ArielleViking
    @ArielleViking Рік тому +1

    These silver crystals were stunning. The electrolyte copper cementing timelapse was fascinating. 👍

  • @tombrooks3812
    @tombrooks3812 Рік тому +3

    Everytime i see the silvercell im amazed,i have to get some so i can look at it under a microscope or even just a 10x loop. Fantastic process, best videos out there. Thankyou for your time and stay safe. One other thing if these were stored in a vacuum would they still tarnish.

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 Рік тому +1

      What comes out of the silver cell is big enough that you dont need a microscope. Silver cement is interesting though.
      On second thought... other microscopes than optical could be very interesting to look at.
      Every single time I watch Sreetips videos I silently thank him for his time. The length and regularity of his videos... I would never have such patience.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +1

      I don’t know

    • @tombrooks3812
      @tombrooks3812 Рік тому

      @@sreetips they also have little paper tabs that stop tarnishing they usually have them where ever they sell silver. Fire mountain gems sells them .they are treated with something that retards tarnishing.i dont know what they are called though.

    • @silverking8742
      @silverking8742 Рік тому +1

      @@tombrooks3812 he has an oz of it for $80 on his ebay store

  • @1331RECIPROCITY
    @1331RECIPROCITY Рік тому +1

    I have transported ALOT of merchandise..If you wrap the Silver cell in foam. A little piece of memory foam... cut 5" squares of foam place your art in their wrap it up.. I'd almost guarantee a safe journey... just something for you 2 ponder..?? Your art is one of a kind..

  • @okiedirtdiggersadventures481
    @okiedirtdiggersadventures481 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful chrysalis!!! Awesome video.

  • @silentferret1049
    @silentferret1049 Рік тому +7

    Sreetips, I would look at the women's water absorbent pads and take the dry gel material out and put into the vial to make a shock absorbent cushion and it absorbs some of the water and is very spongy and soft. Then it will be just rinsing them off after. Only thing you need to do is a bit of a test to see volume of dry to water in the vial cause they will expand so you don't overdo it. Then fill the vial with fresh water (could mix with alcohol to reduce freezing point but I am not sure how the alcohol will affect the silver or gel) insert crystal then add gel and lightly cover, let the gel absorb and add water as needed after and then should be safe for the crystal.

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 Рік тому

      It's a great idea not only because it would work (with water, I wonder about alcohol too) and also very cheap.
      Sodium alginate could also work.

    • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252
      @chemistryofquestionablequa6252 Рік тому

      Diapers have the same polymer and are cheaper for the amount you get. Great idea!

  • @Antonowskyfly
    @Antonowskyfly Рік тому

    You are welcome. Nice to see that a lucky party will be able to display these jewels which, by weight, are far less expensive and far more beautiful than…let’s say, the Mona Lisa painting (which in the end is merely coloured goo smeared on woven fabric…and she ain’t no Christie Brinkley.) A Dali is a different thing altogether though.
    All silliness aside…to assist with getting an “air bubble-free” encapsulation it may help to submerge the container in a jug and screw the lid on while everything is under water. It may also be helpful to have the distilled water a few degrees below room temperature during the sealing process to provide a slight pressurization after it warms. This “method” seems to be helpful when sealing placers in small 1/2-1oz. display vials.
    Thank you Sir!👍👍🤟

    • @apveening
      @apveening Рік тому

      I would use water that was a few degrees above room temperature and a properly sealing lid, that will suck the lid solidly closed.

  • @shaneyearby4438
    @shaneyearby4438 Рік тому +1

    Those are some amazing silver pieces. They look like something out of Superman's fortress of solitude.

  • @billybillo9998
    @billybillo9998 Рік тому +2

    Those silver cells never disappoint in beauty!

  • @billasegan3261
    @billasegan3261 Рік тому

    VERY KOOL LOOKING SILVER CRYSTAL. THAT WOULD MAKE SOME NICE DISPLAY PIECE IN SOMETHING LIKE A GLASS SNOW GLOBE . I COULDN'T BELIEVE HOW MUCH IT WEIGHED EITHER WOW HEAVY STUFF

  • @SkullerMetals
    @SkullerMetals Рік тому +2

    Those crystals are stunning!

  • @EchoJulez
    @EchoJulez Рік тому +3

    Outstanding! I’d be interesting in seeing a video delving deeper into how the silver cell works, if you haven’t already produced one. Keep up the great work.

    • @jaysonstinson9458
      @jaysonstinson9458 Рік тому

      you can find silver crystals in your backyard. they usually grow under sheds and porches. once you find some, just collect a few and place them in a bowl. the process is quick and easy so what are you waiting for

  • @maxblay6833
    @maxblay6833 Рік тому +1

    That blue solution with the crystals in it looks pretty awesome

  • @KiwiKoNZ
    @KiwiKoNZ Рік тому +2

    19:51 Pure silver! 🤩👍✨

  • @hotrod47944
    @hotrod47944 Рік тому +1

    What if you shipped them in a mineral oil instead of distilled water?? Since mineral oil is much more viscous sand thicker than water it may act as a shock absorber and potentially less breakage??? Just a thought…

  • @andrewbrady3139
    @andrewbrady3139 Рік тому +1

    Senior Chief, If you wrote a manual on how you process silver (and where to buy required supplies), I’d buy a copy.
    AM3

  • @MarkMarvin1983
    @MarkMarvin1983 Рік тому +1

    I’m always amazed how beautiful the crystals are when you harvest them! Too bad I never got the chance to try this in my college Chemistry Lab! ❤

  • @arnedalbakk6315
    @arnedalbakk6315 Рік тому +1

    Hello Mr sreetips.Your crystal silver is yust stunning... I agree whit you sir. Hold on to the silver.

  • @brotherlongshadow8854
    @brotherlongshadow8854 Рік тому +1

    This was fascinating to watch. I have something new to try now. Thanks for the video, brother

  • @jamesquintana3807
    @jamesquintana3807 Рік тому

    Extraordinary beautiful silver crystals it will be great for a Christmas ornament displayed

  • @herrhaber9076
    @herrhaber9076 Рік тому +1

    "I cant describe to you how beautiful these things are"
    Dont worry, we're all looking and probably couldnt describe the smiles on our faces except by saying it's very large.
    Out of curiosity, have you ever looked at the smaller crystals from cementing under a microscope ? They are very interesting to watch and wildly differ with different concentrations of silver nitrate.
    Mostly "needles" and "pine trees" among crystals of various shapes. Beautiful sight.

  • @brucewright5061
    @brucewright5061 Рік тому +2

    I noticed that you formed crystals when you made a small silver cell with a graphite cathode. I think it was due to having a small surface area for the cathode that the crystals formed. Using the stainless steel bowl, you have a very dispersed electricity source and this forms a multitude of small trees, rather than a few large crystals.

  • @erikward760
    @erikward760 Рік тому

    Two videos in 1 day! You're spoiling us!

  • @mrbikeman
    @mrbikeman Рік тому

    You've got some real nice silver juice there. Grows some mighty fine crystals...

  • @llamapi3
    @llamapi3 Рік тому

    These entire processes are fascinating

  • @apveening
    @apveening Рік тому +1

    After reading the reactions, I have one more idea for growing larger crystals. Isolate most of the bowl on the inside (wax should do, pH should be about neutral) and use some small starter crystals which are in contact with the bowl and the electrolyte. Varying current should give different results (voltage is about right, you need a certain minimum to even keep the reaction going).

  • @rockbutcher
    @rockbutcher Рік тому +42

    Nice batch there Senior Chief! I was once involved with a team shipping really delicate mineral specimens to the Royal Ontario Museum. Really spiny needle shaped growths etc. that were very delicate. What we did was to select a container a bit bigger than the specimen and then pour in powdered laundry detergent to form a base. Then you put the specimen in and pour the detergent all around it. You have to tap the sides of the box to make it settle, but don't push down on the top, compressing it. It has to just work its way around to support the specimen. Then just top it off with enough detergent to completely fill the box so nothing moves if the box is turned on its side and you are good to go.

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 Рік тому +3

      I would never have thought of that without you. Thanks for a very fun fact.

    • @mikeforshee8778
      @mikeforshee8778 Рік тому

      0 poo f

    • @DaftFader
      @DaftFader Рік тому +3

      Basically like miniature packing peanuts.

    • @rockbutcher
      @rockbutcher Рік тому

      @@DaftFader Yep, and non-abrasive.

    • @jeremyk.6456
      @jeremyk.6456 Рік тому +1

      You have to make sure that the mineral that you’re shipping doesn’t degrade based on the specific pH of the detergent or baking soda depending on which side of the pH scale the mineral is on because any moisture could cause chemical reactions that would destroy the specimen if it was opposite on the pH scale (acid or base). It is a good idea and method though to transport the vast majority of delicate minerals/crystals though.

  • @buidelrat132
    @buidelrat132 Рік тому +1

    For bigger crystals, you could use a slightly lower voltage, very clean electrolyte free from copper, warmth, no vibration, and more time.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +2

      There’s a professional refiner on the goldrefiningforum.com (Goldsilverpro) who recommends adding some dissolved copper to the electrolyte. He claimed that the copper promotes fat crystal growth. My experience confirms this claim.

    • @buidelrat132
      @buidelrat132 Рік тому

      @@sreetips thank you for the correction! Love the time lapse content, keep up the great work.

  • @1Raphael
    @1Raphael Рік тому

    👍👍 Always AWESOME videos silver crystals that you get out of that silver cell are just amazing..

  • @korpse6rinder
    @korpse6rinder Рік тому +1

    The crystals grow big when they are the easiest point of current flow. There was a guy that put magnets around his cell to make certain points grow faster. Unfortunately he never finished his video series, that I know of. Something about the magnet currents makes the power flow better in spots.

    • @robertspalding4717
      @robertspalding4717 Рік тому +1

      Likewise, if there are seed crystals (nucleation points), the silver will grow faster. As you were scraping the bowl, you were getting rid of places that will grow the crystals fastest. Similar to seed pearls, or rock candy.

    • @webrockers
      @webrockers Рік тому

      @@robertspalding4717 @sreetips that was exactly my thought. Maybe you could experiment on that?

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +1

      The silver is not true crystals. It’s called silver crystal because it looks like crystals.

  • @______IV
    @______IV Рік тому

    ‘Elements" author Theodore Gray stated that silver didn’t tarnish as much before the industrial revolution because there was far less sulphur in the air. While that may be true, no one back then ever saw silver this pure and shiny either.

  • @joesammy4343
    @joesammy4343 Рік тому +1

    If you want to get larger crystals ...try isolating the bowl from small vibrations from the environment .

  • @lawrencerenew8668
    @lawrencerenew8668 Рік тому

    Absolutely astonishing❤️. I’ve got me a hole pile of sterling silver, and pounds of old silver supper ware, I’m about ready to recover. I’ve been paying strict attention to your methods. I also make silver spoons for salmon fishing. For reasons only a salmon can convey, the love silver. Off record I saw you with I think a DDG USN hat on, in an old video. I was a carrier sailor.
    USS Midway. Love your work shipmate🇺🇸

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +3

      I was on Alwyn FF1081, Farragut DDG37, Semmes DDG 18

  • @ghostprotocol5876
    @ghostprotocol5876 Рік тому

    The footage of the reaction ( Ag/Cu )is incredible. Best i ever seem. 👏🏽👏🏽

  • @uncle_thulhu
    @uncle_thulhu Місяць тому

    Suggestion: ship the (utterly gorgeous) crystals in some kind of gel? Silicon rubber? Gelatin? At a pinch, lube? Anything to cushion them. I recommend some kind of (preferably non-perishable) gelatin. Then you can just sit them in some hot water and it will just melt away. Aquagel might work too - just throw a large pinch of Orbees in the jar with the silver, fill it with water, let the Orbees absorb and expand until they are holding everything in place and then pour off the excess.
    Personally, I'd most likely cast them in resin.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Місяць тому

      In clear acrylic

    • @uncle_thulhu
      @uncle_thulhu Місяць тому

      @@sreetips exactly! In fact, I would probably put them in tinted acrylic, blue or maybe red. They're so beautiful, they'd make excellent (and fairly valuable) desk ornaments.
      Of course, encasing them in acrylic does rather limit what you can do with them. That's why I was thinking gelatin or aquagel for shipping - they both melt and dissolve in hot water.

  • @newtsleatherandmetalsmithy1827

    I want to take a minute and say thank you for serving to a fellow veteran and a happy belated veterans day

  • @gratshor
    @gratshor Рік тому +2

    You can fill jar with crystalls with spirits (methanol -97°C, ethanol -114°C or isopropanol -89°C, even 39-40%vol. ethanol solution aka "vodka" holds -25°C). Spirits are freezing not by cristalising but by thikening. Spirits are uses as component of some antyfreezes. For example for winter season windshield washing liquid in subpolar regions.
    Just be sure you use sulfur ions free solvent.

    • @apveening
      @apveening Рік тому

      I was also thinking about spirits (and glycol, common anti freeze).

  • @JeffJeffers0n
    @JeffJeffers0n Рік тому +1

    Nobody says "Pure Silver Crystal" better than Sreetips :)

  • @offgridstruggles7504
    @offgridstruggles7504 Рік тому +1

    Pour those crystals in resin. They will keep their shape and make beautiful display pieces!

  • @ScottRedstone
    @ScottRedstone Рік тому

    Possible embed in gelatin. Water based. That might protect them. I’d pour one layer, let it set then lay crystals on top and pour second layer, let set, third layer, etc.

  • @buckstarchaser2376
    @buckstarchaser2376 10 місяців тому

    With other forms of crystal-growing, the method for getting larger crystals is to use a very pure solution and grow the crystals very slowly. The size and shape of the crystal is a visual demonstration of the purity of the material. If I had to recreate your crystals, I would start with fresh AgNO3 crystals that were very large to begin with. Then, I'd rinse them off with 2x+ distilled water before dissolving them to saturation. Then, use already-purified silver crystals as the feedstock and make sure everything is as clean as possible, and stays clean throughout the deposition.
    I suspect that the big crystals got their small crystal coatings because the very-clean electrolyte became concentrated in other materials as you purified the silver. This laid down some of the contaminants on the surface of the material, which started a new crystal at that point, but with a very weak attachment, because the larger crystal had no flaws in its structure there (being that this is how crystals grow).
    Other factors for improving crystal size are usually things like stable environmental conditions, meaning temperature and movement of the solution. In my glass beaker silver crystal growths, shining a bright LED light through the solution at various angles will reveal streams of fluid within the solution. They have slightly different diffraction angles, so upon very close examination you can see how the more current you push, the more depleted the local solution around the deposition region is. When you deplete the local environment of silver ions, whatever contaminants present, or simply the momentary reduction of silver abundance, will cause something other than silver to be deposited, due to voltage in excess of what is required for the silver being high enough to deposit something else. This can be only temporary too, like if the water in the solution is momentarily electrolysed, even to a microscopic degree. This causes a malformation in the crystalline structure, and on that malformation another crystal will begin even if all of the starting conditions were high-purity. It is the equivalent of the crystals "Crashing out" to varying degrees.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  10 місяців тому +1

      These are actually dendrites. They are not true crystals.

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 10 місяців тому

      @@sreetips I was excited to learn all about dendrites after reading that. It turns out that "dendrite", in this context, refers to a tree-like, or branching structure in crystals.
      Further reading about dendritic crystalography, the various sources and topics tend to point to increased girth vs length when various conditions are set to "slow". Meaning low current (to keep the surface uniform in energy), high purity (because contaminants on the crystal face will form a nucleation site, and thus branching), minimized accelerations (don't bump it or play loud music), and keeping the temperature of the solid/liquid interface very stable (allow time for the spent/pregnant solution to convect so the local/surface concentrations are stable.
      Many of the conditions for growing a fat silver dendritic crystal with little branching really come down to different ways of saying "slow, with minimal disturbance... and in zero gravity, if possible." Pretty much the same rules for maximizing any crystal.
      The zero gravity part is very likely due to convection being a direct result of density variations in a gravitic field. By removing gravity, the zone proximal to the growing crystal face can be kept even more kinetically stable. The transfer of ions would then be dominated by diffusion, rather than being dominated by convection.
      Diffusion is much more predictable than convection, and so the less convection you cause, the more growth potential you will have on any one crystal branch.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  10 місяців тому

      The silver plates out, over and over, on the stainless bowl at first. Then in itself as the silvers grows.

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 10 місяців тому

      @@sreetips Yes. The various sources stated that before a crystal dendrite grows, it will first form a small sphere that grows until the surface is large enough to form an instability, which then grows out as a point. The mechanism at play here is described as "minimizing the total surface energy." By turning a medium energy smooth surface into a sharp point, the energy imbalance is focused on the very tip of the crystal growth while the total surface area grows rapidly as the branch forms.
      The frost-like crystal layers on your bowl are likely due to the many tiny imperfections where the electrons are building up and focusing there.
      One way to start out a run for maximizing crystal size would be to use the current limiting feature of your power supply and set it very low during the initial stages. This would [hypothetically] limit crystal growth to fewer nucleation sites. These crystal starts will then get most of the electrical current, and so the current will need to be kept very low.
      I suspect that whatever caused you to get bigger crystals that one time was that you went on a vacation. You didn't want the run to run out of material or short out while you were gone, so you set the current extra low (or a poor connection happened). Being that you were gone, you likely set the thermostat lower, and so the solution got cold, had low current, and greatly reduced vibrations in the fluid.
      Or it took a trip on the space shuttle. One of the papers I read claimed that a crystal growth experiment aboard the space shuttle had new branches start whenever the shuttle used its thrusters to change course/position.

  • @shaneyork300
    @shaneyork300 Рік тому

    Who ever buys this should have a wooden base made to set the lid in for stability and they could state what it is on the front of the wood base, kinda like a trophy!!

  • @FancyPants43
    @FancyPants43 Рік тому

    I love watching the silver crystals form, especially from your past video with the 🎄Christmas Tree🎄. I thought that was pretty nifty. Wait, I think that from another channel. 🤔

  • @Steelythestacker
    @Steelythestacker 3 місяці тому

    Those are really big chunks! The biggest crystal I have grown is only about 3/8" long with the diameter of a pencil.

  • @ExtractingMetals
    @ExtractingMetals Рік тому +1

    For the sale of experimentation you should make some copper electrolyte and see if you can grow copper crystals with the same process.

    • @mrimmortal1579
      @mrimmortal1579 Рік тому

      It’s completely possible, but unfortunately would not be cost-effective to do so. As an art project it would be cool to see, but as cheap and plentiful as copper is you would lose money in the time it takes to set it up plus the electricity to run it.

  • @hussbilbs
    @hussbilbs Рік тому +1

    The silver crystals are gorgeous.

  • @JamesSkellington-xj8nn
    @JamesSkellington-xj8nn Рік тому

    Absolutely Amazing the to watch the silver bond to the Copper . 😮👍👍

  • @daviddavis2597
    @daviddavis2597 Рік тому +2

    Gooood evening from central Florida! Hope everyone has a great night! Silver looks delicious! How long does the anode last... batches?

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +1

      Goooood evening!

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому +2

      About a year doing two to three runs per month

    • @daviddavis2597
      @daviddavis2597 Рік тому +1

      @@sreetips wow... much longer than I expected!

  • @josephcormier5974
    @josephcormier5974 Рік тому

    Very nice batch of silver crystal excellent video awesome content thank you for sharing this five stars brother

  • @jasonhowarth6789
    @jasonhowarth6789 Рік тому

    Watching the silver precipitate out of the electrolyte onto the copper is like watching the Titanic form its rust icicles!

  • @TheBubagrunt
    @TheBubagrunt Рік тому

    Silver saver paper will prevent tarnish oxidation.
    A small piece is all that’s needed.

  • @fredericomachado478
    @fredericomachado478 Рік тому

    Try to place some tiny leds spots on the base of the container, place them to iluminate the cristals silver from bottom to top. It will look amazing.

  • @offgridstruggles7504
    @offgridstruggles7504 Рік тому +1

    Dry them completely and then add a iron oxide disk to the jar. That will suck all the oxygen out of their so they don't tarnish.

  • @michalelovecraft999
    @michalelovecraft999 Рік тому

    This was amazing to watch. Very informative. You got my subscription 😊

  • @ThorTubeview
    @ThorTubeview Рік тому

    An other idea to keep them intact, is to remove any oxygen from the bottle.
    They are without doubts, some technics who permit that.
    Just an idea, if I can suggest it, of course ;-)

  • @moviezaftermidnight6348
    @moviezaftermidnight6348 Рік тому

    The large silver crystals in these epoxy items would be really nice.... like a globe with the silver crystals like a snow flake.. epoxy on a lathe projects..
    They look like "Dilithium Crystals" for the starship warp drive...

  • @otilium7503
    @otilium7503 Рік тому

    Beautiful magic of chemicals!

  • @hectororellana3397
    @hectororellana3397 Рік тому

    I would try packing those silver cristal on a thin jewelry box and pack it with cotton balls on top and bottom so they won’t move and there’s a good chance they will not brake cause they won’t be loose or moving try it friend and see if it works.

  • @semperfidelis1550
    @semperfidelis1550 Рік тому

    Fascinating, the chemistry!…🔥🔥🔥

  • @donm6578
    @donm6578 Рік тому +1

    You could sell those. Like in a small jar with a fluid that prevents tarnishing. They look so cool

    • @donm6578
      @donm6578 Рік тому

      Kept watching , you do sell them. I had just watched the previous silver crystal video like an hour ago, that's when I thought it would be nice to buy one. Commented on this video as soon as I saw it was up lol

  • @cherrybacon9790
    @cherrybacon9790 Рік тому

    Man, I would cast the third nice crystal in Epoxy- looking gorgeous

  • @holfeightyeight3375
    @holfeightyeight3375 Рік тому

    Those silver crystals would look really nice in epoxy :)

  • @james35124
    @james35124 Рік тому

    It would be neat to see some of these silver crystals preserved in resin... maybe a collaboration with one of those channels ?

  • @pipeman65
    @pipeman65 Рік тому

    Try adding some sheet gelatin to the container that has the crystal and water in it. Let the gelatin dissolve, then set. When your customer gets their package, they can place gelatin encased crystal in warm water to dissolve gelatin, rinse and dry. I think this would protect it well in shipping.

  • @scottprather5645
    @scottprather5645 Рік тому

    Got to figure out a way to grow those crystals so that they're like a mineral specimen and you'd have a real gold mine on your hands or silver mine as the case may be!

  • @mcplthivierge
    @mcplthivierge Рік тому

    You could encase them in epoxy resin blocks, Senior Chief !

  • @1331RECIPROCITY
    @1331RECIPROCITY Рік тому

    One more thing..... I don't know if it would work.. but get a can of clear coat paint, and try 2 spray one piece so that way it seals it up from the atmosphere..? Outstanding work good Sir.

  • @masacatior
    @masacatior Рік тому

    One idea I suggest is to evaporate solutions to reduce the volume of waste, specially those that are very dilute (silver nitrate).

  • @SMOBY44
    @SMOBY44 Рік тому

    Interesting to see the piece of copper pipe you put in the beaker to cement the silver has a band of residue that appears to be from strapping tape. Nothing cements on that band for quite awhile.

  • @couragedoge8644
    @couragedoge8644 Рік тому

    Have you tried higher concentrations of electrolyte for bigger crystals? Play with voltages? Have you tried growing the crystals "out" instead of "in"? Could be interesting.
    To ship the crystals you could try to ship them in very fine sand to keep the stable. Slowly add fine sand and let settle it, then add water and seal the container. Customers can carefully extract the crystals by tipping the container on the side and then wash out the sand. Then they could reuse the container for display.

  • @gunnystew7404
    @gunnystew7404 Рік тому +1

    Man, 5 years to retire from the Corp. I’d love to try some of the stuff from your videos!!!

  • @waynoswaynos
    @waynoswaynos Рік тому

    Adding Seed Crystals in with the new electrolyte makes instant crystals in my Tin electro win cell so I expect it may work here. Adding 0.01g/l gelatin and a sulphone makes a more compact build up without the long crystal growth the ends up shorting the cell in no time. I wonder if some additive like this could be helpful here. Not as pretty but a longer time between clean outs.

  • @chrisvanderburg5568
    @chrisvanderburg5568 Рік тому

    I agree not shipping in water for 2 reasons, freezing and heating. Having your bottle hydrostaticlly full leaves no level of expansion for both temperature ranges.
    I recommend using the gel out of gel packs. Use 1 ziplock bag with a smaller ziplock that fits inside the larger one. Suspend the large one with open end up then suspend the smaller one inside the larger one open end up. Add a little distilled water to the inner bag. Pour the packing gel fluid into the larger bag. As the level comes up it will exert a gentle force on the inner bag. Simply place the crystals into the smaller bag as the level comes up. Use the increasing level of gel as a spacer to space your crystals equally. If you want to limit the amount of swelling of the outer bag then simply do this operation in a box of adequate measurements. I use this method to ship the 8 leg porcelain isolators I manufacture for a customer. Havent broke one yet and they are more fragile than the silver crystals.
    You can also loosely cap the glass container and vacuum pack it or flood the container with nitrogen gas (works better when applied cold as it displaces the air in the bottle)
    I have read about growing gold crystals electrolytically out of solution. Is this something you tried or willing to try?
    Love your video sir. Keep cranking them out and I'll keep liking and sharing.
    Btw can you replace the cutting board with a chunk of lexan. Would love to see the crystal growing from an overhead timelapse.
    I'll even have one made up for you for free if you sent the measurements including center hole.
    If so let me know.
    Thank you

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Рік тому

      Type “wohlwill” into search block on my channel to see the gold cell in operation.

    • @chrisvanderburg5568
      @chrisvanderburg5568 Рік тому

      @@sreetips thank you for your reply sir.
      With all the acid you use to render gold in solution then precipitate then 5 or 6 boils then washes and whatever else you do to achieve a bar of high purity gold, how much does that cost?

  • @McFlysGaming
    @McFlysGaming Рік тому +1

    Use Music/tone to create your silver structure. The best structure will come from prayer. Find a Prayer/worship Audio from UA-cam then place the speakers on both sides next to the silver bowl and loop the audio as the silver if forming . Audio doesn’t has to be loud but just enough that the silver will respond/Vibrate to it. If you don’t understand the meaning then search for Masaru Emoto. A Japanese scientist that study molecular structure of water.

  • @rogerfleury3591
    @rogerfleury3591 Рік тому

    132nd! BEAUTIFUL! Too bad they might break in transit. 😢. Roger in Pierre South Dakota

  • @johnnydelgrady
    @johnnydelgrady Рік тому

    You are awesome. I've learned so much from watching your channel. Love ya.

  • @thewelshnationalist7391
    @thewelshnationalist7391 Рік тому

    Use plastic vacuumed bottles with alcohol. Zero bubbles and zero damage.

  • @sfbfriend
    @sfbfriend Рік тому

    Those silver crystals are absolutely gorgeous. Silver is the most reflective metal on earth. Too bad you couldn't encapsulate them in a resin, would be permanent but man what a mantle piece. Could you see any type of pattern to them? Looks like they go from silver broccoli to rods! Weird.

  • @Knee-ko
    @Knee-ko Рік тому

    Beautiful beautiful crystals

  • @perrytheplatypus199
    @perrytheplatypus199 Рік тому

    So beautiful crystals

  • @rengokuwon1999
    @rengokuwon1999 Рік тому +2

    Can you put isopropyl alcohol in the bottle with silver? It wont freeze as easily as water.

  • @marcusrobinson1778
    @marcusrobinson1778 Рік тому

    I think if you cathode was a small spot on the bottom of the bowl the silver would stack ontop of that one spot and make larger silver crystals.
    Think of rock candy. If you had a million strings when it precipitates out it can go anywhere. If one string and you keep the solution saturated it has to form in that one location.

  • @tedlis517
    @tedlis517 Рік тому

    Suggestion: Add enough distilled water to cover the Ag in the glass container. Then freeze the contents without a cap. Cap and send packed in dry ice. This should immobilize the crystals for transport. Even though the water will expand upon freezing, with enough room in the container it won't compress or distort the crystals. Thaw upon arrival and enjoy.

  • @sledgenwedge
    @sledgenwedge Рік тому +1

    @Sreetips , it may sound crazy ,but there is a chance that you could use KY Jelly as a suspension fluid ,to hold the crystals and keep them from shock damage. test a small piece of your hi purity silver Crystal in sterile KY Jelly suspension fluid for at least 10 days . see if there's any reaction and if not then you have a new packing fluid to preserve the beauty of the piece.

    • @sledgenwedge
      @sledgenwedge Рік тому

      And or maybe a jello made with extra pectin from purified distilled water basically no flavor or color gelatin as a suspension fluid

  • @TheWolfster001
    @TheWolfster001 Рік тому

    Couldn't you put some cotton in a vile with the silver crystal and distilled water to limit the damage?? Thank you for sharing..

  • @johannesdesloper8434
    @johannesdesloper8434 Рік тому

    Ssuch a beautifull metal! Best reflection, best thermal condductivity, best electrical conductor. You could try and store them in Pure nitrogen to prevent tarnishing or maybe Argon or Helium.

  • @RobinSoto-x2v
    @RobinSoto-x2v Рік тому

    It's the low rampage that creates the fluffy cloud looking crystals. It could be the opposite reaction of the fluffy by creating lightning bolt stems to support the tree branch upon which the cloud sits

  • @ericclayton6287
    @ericclayton6287 Рік тому

    I have an idea on shipping, embed them in agar gel. They can be rinsed off at the receiving end. Only an idea but worth testing on specimen or two.

  • @fldallyb
    @fldallyb Рік тому

    Just a thought, might not work at all. But could you put them into a container with melted wax then cool and ship and the customer could just melt the wax away or something like that? Possibly even put it in something like Jell-O or gelatin, shipped and then be rinsed by customer?

  • @thomaswolf6507
    @thomaswolf6507 11 днів тому

    at 3:20 when you pour the blue off and see all the silver lmao, my jaw was like droppp

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  11 днів тому +1

      It’s a beautiful sight.