I think it's time to go BigstackD on that cement silver. Break out the furnace and the what is it #8 crucible? 😅
@randolphvance8889Ай бұрын
Cardboard under crucible helps prevent sticking to firebrick!
@NioneAlmieАй бұрын
Bigstack is how I found sreetips so I love when I see people mention him. No surprise there's a lot of overlap in their fanbases, even if their methods and materials aren't the same.
@stevenkeeffeАй бұрын
@@NioneAlmie BigstackD would love to have all of Sreetips' copper waste!
@Dean_FАй бұрын
I want to start a gofundme to get those 2 together haha
@paulslund1Ай бұрын
I came to write exactly that! Edit: I think that's the "big furnace" Sreetips is referring to around the 13m mark..
@faydwerfreepress1Ай бұрын
I love that you show all of your processes. It would be easy to just show the successes and none of the set backs but you always seem to show where things go wrong and I love that. Thank you.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Thank you, very refreshing to hear a positive comment.
@faydwerfreepress1Ай бұрын
@@sreetips You are most welcome. Thank you again for what you do!
@Feelingsdontmattertothefacts26 күн бұрын
I think if I had this much silver to process, I'd go pour a nice slab of concrete in the back yard and build a forge. Then go buy an antique cast iron kettle and make it so I could pour the entire batch of molten silver right into a bucket of watet to create the shot. Run the thing on wood and save money by not using acetylene to melt the silver.
@morlaniusАй бұрын
@5:00 I still think that if you poured from a bit more height the liquid metal would form more droplets so it wouldn't get stuck together so much.
@BattleChemistАй бұрын
Perhaps get a 55gal steel drum to replace the pot setup and even ditch the board. The height of a full drum of cold water should be enough to solidify it before it hits the bottom. You could then run 5+ lb crucibles out of the big propane furnace.
@redbaronrefining532229 күн бұрын
Honestly sreetips, it’s time for you to go induction furnace. I bought a “kit” one on eBay a couple years ago that’s 48-60v and 50 amps. Cost me about $120 including the cooling radiator, water pump, fan, coil, driver, and crucible. The power supply was the potential expensive part, but being a nerd I opted for a used server power supply that runs on 220v and puts out 80a constant current. I drilled a 1/8” hole in the small crucible and have it sitting over a bucket of water. I’ll start with throwing a piece of paper on the bottom of the crucible to catch the cement silver, and load it up with about 100g of cement silver. Once I turn it on, it takes less that 3 minutes to come fully up to temp, and once I get a drip of silver coming from the bottom, I just constantly spoon feed cement silver into it as it melts and drips into the catch pan. You could automate this by installing a small screw feed into the bottom of a bucket full of cement silver, and have it auger/feed the silver at a set speed automatically while dripping into a bucket underneath it. Turn it on, and work on something else as your silver works for you!
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
Another great idea, how do you arrange the coils for this please?
@AronGreenАй бұрын
I'm curious why not use something like a crucible and electric furnace or even gas powered? Seems like it would be a bit easier to manage than a melt dish
@lightsoutisayАй бұрын
hmm, maybe he hasn't worked with this much before 🤔
@bobboukieАй бұрын
Probably because that takes hours to heat, and it's BORING! USE FIRE!!! FIRE is GOOD!!
@ryanholladay3353Ай бұрын
I could be mistaken, but I believe he has used a gas furnace a time or two, but is more comfortable this way.
@Hill-13Ай бұрын
Go with what you know…
@amtscat05Ай бұрын
He has a gas furnace but is uneasy using it
@Clemdawgg28 күн бұрын
VEVOR makes a single phase induction smelter with a 3kg crucible for under $200. will make that cement go quick. and it's safer than blowing fire onto dust type materials.
@dannomight1980Ай бұрын
Maybe get out the furnace and pour a couple dozen bars instead of making the shot and having to deal with the mess/cleanup that goes along with it? Might be more efficient to grab a bar or two from the stack, lift the anode up and place them right under the anode whenever its needed? I did this in mine and it works quite well given the anode is the same shape as the feeding silver (blank round) and it fits nicely in the :)
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I used to pour bars when I first started.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips this is not a bad idea, the slimes will be displaced better (to the sides of the anode basket by the large mass), the electrolytic erosion still works. Shot might be marginally better for surface area of course but this is very good for your method of using small melt dishes and easier on the wrist action than a 5 lb Crucible at the end of a 4 1/2 ft holder. Give it a try? A round rimmed bottom mold would be best but any shape to start the test is better.
@mcwolfbeastАй бұрын
Things always seem to happen just as you are about to pour. My own furnace mishap a while back also was at that point. Like the universe is purposefully picking the most dangerous few seconds for stuff to happen XD. Glad to know you're OK and the metal didn't cause injuries! Always use PPE, folks.
@DonariaRegiaАй бұрын
The crucibles cracking was a bummer. I leave a gap between the fire bricks wider than half the crucible and position a weeding torch to engulf the entire bottom in flame. It reduces the thermal energy required from the top and keeps temperatures more even from inside versus outside the dish. All that silver represents a lot of refined gold, very impressive work!
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
Great idea! The physical strain on a melt dish from the mass of silver (its weight) when picked up repeatedly with a gooseneck pliers might contribute to the cracks as well as the temperature differential between top and bottom so additionally use your spring loaded Crucible holder.
@mikeshaw201118Ай бұрын
Bravo Mr Tips, bravo sir. I always knew you would keep your floor and bench sweeps but I liked the way you recover the metals in them. A very simple but efficient process.
@tribble1Ай бұрын
In my mind a single run of the big propane furnace would be way less risky than repeated heat cycles until failure in little crucibles.
@timsmith9645Ай бұрын
Great video nice silver shot can't to see the start up of the silver cell it always beautiful to see silver crystal thanks for sharing sreetips
@BronzeAgePuritanАй бұрын
having a giant bucket of silver powder to melt is a nice problem to have.
@andrewfelker479329 күн бұрын
The Ag and Copper signify biphasic sleep. Georgia residents know this "Unwell" according to certain #MatchBox20 inferences. Dichotomy to investigate: The Fox and the Hound -- Two Pack DVD? Maty Mauk might border cross due to Apple AI. Third string quarterbacks everywhere must therefore see the #AirwolfDVDSet to evade #Sundial disturbances. Watch your six well. Tails from #TopGunGoose - Cougar Wins Some Flips, Tom.
@PsiCloneRocketАй бұрын
put the heat source shooting straight down in the center, dont try to rush it with the handheld torch. i think it causes the crucible lattice to warp and fracture when one part gets hotter or cooler as you swirl the mixture
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I was thinking the same thing.
@josephcormier5974Ай бұрын
Well that should keep the beast fed for a few days sir. thank you for sharing this enjoyable video with us six stars sir
@dimorvanerkel202529 күн бұрын
Wow mr Sreetips this is awesome what you are doing with the silver proces great ✨️👍🏆and i learn from you 😂🎉greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱🇺🇲
@sreetips29 күн бұрын
Thank you Netherlands.
@apveening29 күн бұрын
We should start the Dutch sreetips fan club ;)
@waynoswaynosАй бұрын
Thermal shock is annoying. Silicon Carbide is tougher in that regard. Or maybe if you used two melt dishes (or crucibles) one after the other. Let one cool slowly and use then the next. Followed by the previous one now that it has cooled down, and so on. This way there is no thermal shock between the large cold mass of silver and the hot ceramic. You could go all day that way.
@AntonowskyflyАй бұрын
You are welcome. It looks like the crucibles performed admirably. Being that the mass of that cup of silver is 10.5 times compared to a cup of coffee that’s a lot of weight for that heavily cycled vessel to haul around. Better for it to break there rather than going into the drink. Looking forward to seeing the shot become shards! Thank you Sir!👍👍🤟
@akgoldbear766915 күн бұрын
I am speechless. A huge amount of silver 🙂
@hschultz12329 күн бұрын
37 lbs of cement sliver. Came from let's say 35 lbs of steeling silver. If the typical mixing ratio with gold jewelry is 5:1, then Sreetips recovered about 7 lbs of 24 k gold. Not bad 👍
@deanshadbolt357Ай бұрын
I hope the watch survived. Great video as always. Great work with the Timelapse.
@BrianBurns-x4rАй бұрын
Bummer on the melt dishes! Love watching your videos! Thank you very much for all the teaching you've done
@mattlevesque5927Ай бұрын
Love all your videos sir thank you for making them🎉
@jaypeeztabernac851Ай бұрын
Sometimes Im glad to not have the means or space to do something like this, but I do enjoy watching you doing it safely and not hiding anything when it comes to failures.
@ultimatewestyexperience434529 күн бұрын
If you wash the cement silver before you melt it, it would be purer, and you'd have less gunk forming in the silver cell.
@kimberlynolz5725Ай бұрын
Very nice! Love how well u handled busted crucible i didnt handle it as well win my crucible broke with 100g of gold! It was bad day but i eventually got most of it back still missing around 2g tho
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I’ve never had that happen. Both were used. They performed well in their first use.
@Dennis-hu5tpАй бұрын
Thanks for another great video Sreetips😃 Sad that the crucibles broke, lucky you didn't get hurt 🙏🏻. We can call it "shorter interruptions in production due to replacement of consumables😂". /Dennis
@wildmanjeff42Ай бұрын
this is probably the only lab/shop that you clean meticulously and don't throw away or miss any dust !
@cyrusgrissom646Ай бұрын
Yeah it would be simpler to just BigstackD the whole thing quickly but unfortunately sreetips does not like to use the foundry he finds it very loud and scary for what it is meaning too much can go wrong and he is a simple man with a torch
@ThunderboltWisdom6 күн бұрын
I don't know if you meant it but I burst out laughing when you told us that your water pump is called your 'water board'. I thought you were making a Guantanamo bay joke.🤔🤪🤣🤣🤣🤣
@360Vacation229 күн бұрын
Can’t wait to see your next video. I really like your style of making tools as you go, five stars! I know this is probably the wrong time for this question. I gotta ask, I watched your video when you had to fix your fume hood. Do you have anything special for your pipe going out of your squirrel cage?
@sreetips29 күн бұрын
Six inch PVC pipe
@AngelsDontFallАй бұрын
The leaf Is the best part. Always add a Leaf It helps
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I left the leaf because I knew it would draw attention.
@AngelsDontFall29 күн бұрын
@ I figured. It reminded me of my style and something that I would have done as well. Great Content ! And Thank for bringing it to us. 🙏🏻
@shakeorefined2514Ай бұрын
Love the channel! Just out of curiosity, could you use cement silver to inquart your gold for refining?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Not recommended, PGMs follow the silver and build up, undesirable in the silver cell.
@thePen_and_theSwordАй бұрын
That shoe shine is on point brother!
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Redwing high top leather boots
@OnsloVestАй бұрын
I’ve always wondered what you do with your own sweeps… and now I know 😎 thanks for the vid
@Ellis157Ай бұрын
That's a wicked cool color coming off that new crucible after the yellow one broke. It's like in. stuff with the Blue Flame coming out of the torch and hit that crucible must be like a bunch of copper and stuff in it that burns off. It reminds me of that stuff you pour into a fire pit that makes the fire change colors. That's really cool to watch.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
Yup, metalic salts from drift wood work the same way. With a good draft up the chimney no worry, else use PPE for your lungs.
@altafrahman2254Ай бұрын
Your kind of set up (melting silver powder with blow torch) is for hobby only. When you are doing it on commercial scale, you must have induction melting arrangement. An added advantage of Induction melting is there wont be any invisible silver powder that gets blown away when you use blow torch.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I’m not a professional refiner at the commercial level. I’m just a hobby refiner. I have so much cement silver because I’ve grown to hate processing the silver. As a result, it builds up on me. Don’t get me wrong, I love silver. I just hate processing it. It takes a long time and it’s messy. The pure silver that I produce is for my retirement.
@apveening29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips You have surpassed the hobby refiner level a long time ago. You may be a bit short of commercial level professional refiner, but you really need to either take this to a professional level or quit silver altogether, no hanging in the middle and unsupported at that. At this moment you are neither fish nor fowl nor good red meat.
@sreetips29 күн бұрын
I’m backed up, but I’m still chipping away at it. I’ll get it done, at my level, the hobby level. Someone once said if you turn your hobby into your work, then it becomes just that, work.
@apveening29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips "if you turn your hobby into your work, then it becomes just that, work." That is only too true
@mattjackson7445Ай бұрын
That crucible break created beautiful art
@kylecissell95829 күн бұрын
Those poor little ceramic crucibles are great for how cheap they are but they definitely don’t hold up very well over prolonged use. Time for the big boy
@ccculture9681Ай бұрын
I had a good chuckle when I saw that big bucket of silver and little dirty melt dish you intended to use. A modest gas furnace and crucible would seem sensible at that point.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I’ve come to dislike processing the silver from my gold refining. And so I’ve let it build up. I need to get it moving or else I’ll run out of time, on earth.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips Right on, this is only one bucket of several you are behind. Hire it done? A lot of risks anyway you look at this problem, doing it yourself pros and cons vs hire pros and cons, with and without supervision by you (time wasted and gets into trust issues if the time is not wasted). Hard calls either way you go. My regards if they help, disregard if they do not.
@apostolviorel8482Ай бұрын
Allways a pleasure to see your videos. This time, I dont know how much silver recovered with a spoon of ash, but you lost a lot with that craked cricible, in my opinion... You must have a strong hart.
@kimberlynolz5725Ай бұрын
Not really lost just more headache to recover
@ArielleVikingАй бұрын
That crucible failure sure made a mess. A nice amount of silver shot that should keep your beast silvercell fed for awhile. 👍🏻
@CommanderKratticus_II26 күн бұрын
lol, I was just eyeing a bigstackD vid that popped up in my recommended list. Headed there next.
@justinredman4389Ай бұрын
How quickly will your silver cells eat through that almost 9kg of impure silver shot and what do you think the yield will be?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Should take about two weeks. For every kilo of 98% impure shot I add, I should harvest about 980 grams of high purity silver.
@GastronomicEntityАй бұрын
I'd PM you, but I can't, just wondering if that's asbestos sheet your brushing the metal off? It's nasty stuff if not handled carefully.
@sreetips29 күн бұрын
No, that’s backer board from Home Depot.
@GastronomicEntity29 күн бұрын
@sreetips phew
@tolga24Ай бұрын
It's always being super soothing to watch the melting process! Thanks for sharing it Sir! 👊😎
@paulknight1879Ай бұрын
I love the silver sells, I would like to c one of the silver trees up up close I bet they r amazing.
@stevenrowlandson965029 күн бұрын
Recovering precious metals from melt dishes and waste solutions might make for a worth while video.
@johnchism5728Ай бұрын
For what you are doing, there's a better way to do it. Get a cast-iron mortor and drill small holes in the bottom. Make a steel frame to hold it over the water board. Get it orange red hot and add the silver to it. It will melt and drip onto the water board to make shot.
@Ellis157Ай бұрын
Just curious. But why did you leave the leave in there?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Too lazy to pull it out. It won’t hurt anything.
@Arne-ns2mwАй бұрын
@@sreetips😂
@goldsilverjunkie26 күн бұрын
That cement, silver 5 gallon bucket reminds me of that one time I seen on KZbin where a armed cash vehicle was parked in New York with the back open and a guy just passed by picked up a 5 gallon bucket, which was full of gold powder. Now that’s a big come up, never found the guy
@sreetips26 күн бұрын
I think I remember that.
@MerchantMarineGuyАй бұрын
Have you considered a stir bar or second pump creating a rotational flow inside the cooling water? It would help prevent the molten metal droplets from sticking together
@William_BorgesonАй бұрын
I'm still impressed that you waste nothing, it's all a nice closed loop. We should all strive for that, and yeah a decent sized graphite crucible should work. Not sure if the small furnace can handle it, but give it a go. Pouring it will be a pain, it will be heavy, and you don't want it clumping together. Good luck, I'm interested to see what you come up with. Thanks again!
@leongrubaugh2418Ай бұрын
Hey Mr S why don't you add a kinda speedbump to the slide part of your apparatus like a couple of wires so the silver will stay small thanks love your show
@jakesynapse6417Ай бұрын
Wow! Really excited to see the continuation of this video!
@Pablo668Ай бұрын
Yeah, I think the big furnace might be the go. Looking forward to the next vid.
@tedlis517Ай бұрын
I can tell you don't have two golden retrievers like I do, because, instead of sweeping up a stray leaf with silver dust, you'd collect more shedded fur by weight than silver.
@ObsoletePencilАй бұрын
I won't say the number, I'm sure others can do the maths, but today's spot value on that amount of silver is impressive. I am officially jealous 😁❤️
@wageslaveuranus9596Ай бұрын
You are special kind of person Sreetips.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Thank you
@PyroFalconАй бұрын
I'm glad it wasn't a gold melt! Great video, as always.
@jasonwright1687Ай бұрын
Yeah. You might consider a devil forge. But use a long and slender crucible which will fit down the vent in the top so you can do induction style. I think for these melts, you just had your oxygen level a bit too high on that oxy-ace torch.
@MarketHarmonyАй бұрын
Graphite has much better thermal shock resistance, which probably explains why your crucibles were breaking
@spartin8614 күн бұрын
Bigger processing is what we all want to see you do . The time has come, senior. Bust out them furnaces to process that material down. 😅 I appreciate your content either way, shipmate.
@sreetips13 күн бұрын
I appreciate your patience, and I’ll try to ramp up the production soon. I’ll get a couple more 6 liter bowls so I can run three BEAST’s
@Arne-ns2mw13 күн бұрын
@@sreetips👍🔥👍
@TroubledOnePaydirtАй бұрын
With the price of gold being the way it is, I have been selling ALOT of silver paydirt lately. People that pan gold paydirt have begun looking at silver in a whole new light!
@zero7329Ай бұрын
theres just something artistic about the sreetips name having silver splatter around it😊😊😊
@TalRohan2 күн бұрын
fascinating...I was hoping you were finding silver from an easier source but its still interesting to see the process thanks for sharing
@sreetips2 күн бұрын
My wife found 7.5 pounds of unmarked silver at an estate sale a couple weeks ago. She paid $65
@TalRohan2 күн бұрын
@@sreetips wow now thats a result and a half
@watermelonsavage291428 күн бұрын
The cells hunger and must be fed.
@1977JohnBoyАй бұрын
do the melt dishes fail like that purely because used too many times or just unlucky, has a new dish ever done that?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
It’s very rare. Having two fail is extremely rare. I think it’s because they were both used many times in the past.
@LexYeenАй бұрын
IIRC, melt dishes and crucibles _are_ considered consumables for work like this - the rapid thermal cycling when in use makes cracks form and spread increasingly quickly.
@positivelyacademical1519Ай бұрын
@@sreetipscould be the cooling from adding more cement silver to a still hot crucible? Might be better to do fewer cycles on a larger crucible, or do sequential melts in different crucibles.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
@@positivelyacademical1519 yes, any metallic surface will allow condensation in a humid environment when the surface is powder the moisture will wick into it causing a slight dampness about 6 inches down. (Soil type sand experiments for desert living is the source for this research), metal in question is aluminum oxide, company was Norton in the 1950s -they caused some explosions while dry forming grinding wheels then a quick kiln fusing, this led to a drying table prior to today's method of wet forming the grinding wheels and shelf drying before kiln drying/fusing. In short, no matter how dry it was when you put it up it's going to be damp about 6 in down when you remove it.
@LUCKOWLАй бұрын
We need to get this man a devil forge
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I have a big furnace.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips but, but, it is not branded with your name and made by devil forge! I know, sponsors help but... having two always helps when one needs maintenance, unlikely unless there is a cracked Crucible accident and you need to continue.
@someguy-k2hАй бұрын
You just swept the table, and there is already metal on the table. Next to the I on the right hand side.
@Ellis157Ай бұрын
Hey, I like your shoes what kind are those they look comfy.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Redwing high top boots. Got them for ten bucks at an estate sale. Fit me perfect.
@Ellis157Ай бұрын
@@sreetips Excellent really cool that you got him at an estate sale. They look very coffee. there. I was going to say they reminded me of my old Red Wing boots. Mine were like a red color. Man, I wore them things until the souls fell off.
@CothranMike29 күн бұрын
@@Ellis157 and did not look for a cobbler to resole them?
@DavidDavis-fishingАй бұрын
Gooooood evening from central Florida! Hope everyone has a great night!
@Arne-ns2mwАй бұрын
David..my buddy. Have a blessed day🙂
@DavidDavis-fishingАй бұрын
@Arne-ns2mw Thank you! You as well buddy!
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Goooood evening!
@Arne-ns2mwАй бұрын
@@sreetips And there is my buddy Sreetips 😀
@charlesgraham843Ай бұрын
Have you ever had to take the sink drain apart to retrieve any dropped gold or silver?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
No
@peteoneill5799Ай бұрын
Big furnace would definitely be quicker and more efficient
@anatolykosychenko8038Ай бұрын
Hi Ya & best wishes. SuperB! Thanks for work. Be Happy. Sevastopol/Crimea
@bradcraig5111Ай бұрын
Hopefully, peace comes to your part of the world soon.
@frankzahn7773Ай бұрын
When I cleaned out the silver cell, I recovered 32 oz from the solution.
@mackdog3270Ай бұрын
LoL yes, since you're melting metal you should be aware of safe practices. In my shop, it's number four on my list of priorities.
@Im__34Ай бұрын
I wonder if you could make a filter system when you first refined your metals instead of vacuuming the vapor collect it like moonshine because they’re still precious metals In the vapor
@yipyipyouknowthething2113Ай бұрын
Have you ever tried running the cement silver directly in the silver cell? It might be worth… a shot?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
It clogs the filter
@newtsleatherandmetalsmithy1827Ай бұрын
You have an electric kiln ive seen you use it a couple of times you just need a bigger grafite crucible and a pair of tongs. Which i will happily make for you in whatever size you wish
@raytruesdell7873Ай бұрын
So are you going to show us how to recycle crucibles for precious models? Please and thank you 👍
@EthanMcPhoenixАй бұрын
That's brute thermal cracking ! You should add a second layer of wool !
@civilizationkills313827 күн бұрын
Yeah i just have buckets of precious metals laying around doesn't everyone
@sreetips27 күн бұрын
Me too!
@lamarkelsaw8923Ай бұрын
Extremely dangerous!! It’s good that nothing happened to you!! How were you able to come up with so many buckets of cement silver I wonder? This is the most unique channel I’ve ever watched! Hands-down!
@sreetipsАй бұрын
I refine gold. I use sterling silver, that I buy at estate sales, to refine the scrap gold. I recover the silver from that, melt into shot, and run it through my silver cell. Silver is a by-product of my gold refining. The cell converts the impure silver (about 980 parts per thousand silver) to high purity four nines fine (9999 parts per ten thousand) pure elemental silver metal. So I’m refining the impure silver, into high purity silver, not creating silver out of thin air. When it’s full, I harvest the pure silver crystal, put it away and forget about it. Then I repeat the whole thing again.
@lamarkelsaw8923Ай бұрын
@@sreetips I’ve NEVER… heard or witnessed your line-of-work being performed. It was like seeing a new earth with never seen before human beings! YOU are one of those beings!! Say hi to Paul and Bubba!!! LOL!!
@sreetips29 күн бұрын
I’ll do it! Thank you
@someguy-k2hАй бұрын
37 lbs of cement silver, I hope you don't have any other plans for the day.
@slimpickins09er87Ай бұрын
That's why he should be using his big furnace. With a 10kg crucible, he could have it all melted within an hour.
@someguy-k2hАй бұрын
@@slimpickins09er87 I was wondering why you were working inside. This is an outdoor job.
@ClassicallyNamedАй бұрын
Other plans usually include going to eat with Mrs S and maybe hitting a flea market on the way... But we knew that..
@primo1331Ай бұрын
Would an induction heater work better for this process? would be less harsh on the crucibles I'd think.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Possibly
@GalenLeRaaz28 күн бұрын
As I can recall, sreetips had an electrical oven with a graphite crucible... Why not use that one to process this amount?
@sreetips28 күн бұрын
Too slow
@Smizzmeister4shoАй бұрын
I’ve been waiting for this one!
@KEPoles26 күн бұрын
Just so I understand, the crucibles are cracking because of the cycling between heating and cooling?
@sreetips26 күн бұрын
I’m not sure why
@scottindestinАй бұрын
Two failing crucibles is unreal.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
One is unreal, I’ve never had it happen like that in fourteen years of melting metals.
@apveening29 күн бұрын
@@sreetips And now you understand why I believe in Murphy.
@davestark7880Ай бұрын
Am I the only one that fell out of the chair when the crucible broke? I thought it exploded at first.
@NioneAlmieАй бұрын
I didn't even notice what had happened until he said so 😅
@lennyjanoff8533Ай бұрын
why not use a Double Crucible. That may prevent splattering..
@AlixandriaBrooks29 күн бұрын
"...probably 20 gallons in there..." And here I thought your neglect of improper crucible heating and overloading of said crucible was a feat worth of the Darwin Award and then this pops out of your mouth...🤣🤣🤣🤣
@apveening29 күн бұрын
He already disqualified himself for the Darwin Award (and she is good looking).
@1977JohnBoy29 күн бұрын
who else never knew what the M buttons on a calculator was for lol i always avoided them thinking it was to do with E equals mc squared lolol
@bfd1565Ай бұрын
Good evening Sreetips, 37.4lbs...L0L. Just pouring 6 or 7lbs of cement silver is enough of a pain in the butt. 37.4lbs is an undertaking in itself. I'd personally would like to see you melt the low grade sweeps next time in the last melt just to see what you ended up with. Experiment idea: Your silver shot is extremely contaminated compared to what I see when I processing my own pounds silver shot. I was wonder as an experiment if you were to put your contaminated silver shot back into solution and re-cement it out on copper. To then re-melt it back into silver shot. Would it clean it up leaving contaminants behind instead of in a $10 filter which is soon to be going up in price? That left over solution could then go into the Stock Pot to recovered any precious metals still floating around to be processed at a later date. Just an off key interesting video idea I would be interested in seeing. I'm sure the KZbin views will be well worth the nitric acid costs. Could be something extra that could be done in the background of the next silver cell series. Best wishes and have a wonderful Thanksgiving Mr & Mrs Sreetips.
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Happy Thanksgiving.
@apveening29 күн бұрын
His silver shot is about 98% pure, the color comes from the main contaminant (copper) at about 1.5%, which as a tendency of migrating to the surface when solidifying, especially with small volumes like shot. The remaining about 0.5% contaminants is mostly gold and PGMs, from the latter mostly palladium.
@bfd156529 күн бұрын
@@apveening Exactly...
@SweetLeavesXbox1Ай бұрын
Awesome content!
@IonOtterАй бұрын
Question: Could you use the cement silver in the silver cell _directly?_ Or do you have to melt it down into metallic silver first? Is there a chemical reason for this?
@sreetipsАй бұрын
Cement silver clogs the filter.
@NioneAlmieАй бұрын
I would love to an update on if you manage to salvage the spilled silver and how you went about it. I'm sure it would be a major PITA to film it, so maybe a community post or story time during your next refining?