Silver Cell Maintenance sreetips

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • Where does the silver come from?

Komentáře • 317

  • @jamesquintana3807
    @jamesquintana3807 Před 4 lety +29

    For one thing I can say I never get tired watching your videos it's amazing phenomenal excellent craftsmanship

    • @FanOfAwesome1
      @FanOfAwesome1 Před 4 lety +3

      And his methods improve over time, and that's also entertaining to see.

    • @benjaminhoagland8473
      @benjaminhoagland8473 Před 4 lety

      Do you have a Sigma or other testing device? The crystals are absolutely beautiful and undoubtedly pure. And I know you sell them for a premium and get some of your cost back. But I'm curious what the purity is before the silver cell. I've seen a couple of videos on CZcams where bars passed .999 fine on a sigma after just nitric, cementing on copper, and melting.

  • @salvatoremilitello8490
    @salvatoremilitello8490 Před 4 lety +16

    that audio is amazing great upgrades and editing

    • @cwtrain
      @cwtrain Před 4 lety

      I hear pops, hisses, and every exhale. Quality has gone up but it still sounds too hot- like a lapel mic being worn too close to the mouth.

    • @salvatoremilitello8490
      @salvatoremilitello8490 Před 4 lety +1

      @@cwtrain it is but he is still learning and regardless of his gain being a bit to high and ur volume in ur headphones being up to loud probably; it is a huge step in the right direction he figured out mono input vs stereo so it comes thru to both ears and the poping is from it being clipped on a headset mic that is directly infront of his mouth if u watched the whole video there is a clip showing that

  • @biglittlebossgd1294
    @biglittlebossgd1294 Před 4 lety +1

    Love the handgun at 16:25...guess it's needed with that much silver and gold around?

  • @ImHibby
    @ImHibby Před 4 lety

    Great run through of your process. That is some pretty silver when you get done with it. Thanks for making this.

  • @demandred1957
    @demandred1957 Před 4 lety +7

    I work at a electrical switch gear rebuilding shop.. I cut up 1/8 thick sheets of coin silver all the time. It's so common, they just sweep up the shavings and toss them.. (unless I get to it first..) lol

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +10

      I’ll bet they will stop doing that when silver hits $100

    • @demandred1957
      @demandred1957 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sreetips I would be amazed if it ever hits that. About the only way that's gonna happen, is if there is a full scale hot civil war in America..
      And if that happens, I doubt they will even be open for business anyway.
      I didn't even mention the pounds of silver tungsten chips we toss every day..lol
      I don't mess with that stuff since it's only 30-38% silver by weight, and takes a bunch more effort to process out.

    • @chrisstebbins2203
      @chrisstebbins2203 Před 4 lety

      Your stupid dude!!

    • @demandred1957
      @demandred1957 Před 4 lety +1

      @@chrisstebbins2203 Shouldn't talk like that. It shows your ignorance.

  • @charleswise5570
    @charleswise5570 Před 4 lety +1

    Absolutely fantastic way of summarizing the silver purification process. Thanks!

  • @goldrefining
    @goldrefining Před 4 lety +4

    This channel is the bomb!
    All free.... all the time!

  • @amorstyletarot4866
    @amorstyletarot4866 Před 4 lety +2

    Really cool video! Love seeing stuff like this on YT! Keep up the good work!

  • @dirtybayadventures9563

    the silver cell is truly beautiful to look at.

  • @demandred1957
    @demandred1957 Před 4 lety +11

    telling ya man, making nitric is super easy, and brings the cost down to about $20.00 per quart..
    Just have to do a recrystallization of the ammonium/potassium nitrate because the anti cake powder and other impurities will make it foam if you don't.
    $100.00 worth of glassware, and you will be good to go.

    • @SMOBY44
      @SMOBY44 Před 4 lety +1

      I get my 68% for $21 a liter including shipping. Time is worth something.

    • @adambuysyuckyhouses
      @adambuysyuckyhouses Před 4 lety

      Hes right u should get a distillation rig so u can collect the fumes

    • @adambuysyuckyhouses
      @adambuysyuckyhouses Před 4 lety +1

      @@SMOBY44 where

    • @aa1.5
      @aa1.5 Před 4 lety +1

      I make my own nitric using sodium nitrate and sulphuric in stoichiometric amounts. I add water to the reactions vessels (I run 2 3L flasks at into a claisen adapter which connects to a 2L collection flask). I end up with about 1800ml of 68% nitric in about 2hrs and the cost is about $25 in chemicals. The thing is to source your nitrate so you are using a pure product as one has stated if there is anti caking agents in the nitrate it will foam up and cause you problems.

    • @demandred1957
      @demandred1957 Před 4 lety

      @@aa1.5 Where are you getting sodium nitrate at a decent price?
      I usually order a 50lb bag of potassium nitrate off amazon, or other places around the net for around $80.00 delivered.

  • @FraustByte
    @FraustByte Před 4 lety +2

    Look into devil forge and look into their furnaces. Big stack, Adam rock and Melt and cast from UK all use them I think it would be beneficial instead of making one.

  • @GSProspecting
    @GSProspecting Před 4 lety +6

    wow great job fam. GOLD SQUAD OUT!!!

  • @spidermcgavenport8767
    @spidermcgavenport8767 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely incredible process. Thank you for your attention to detail! Greatly appreciated.

  • @bayareaartist999
    @bayareaartist999 Před 4 lety +1

    They make computer controlled electric kilns for knife making. They are small and can go up to a temperature that you want and hold there. Also there is no air movement in these kilns to blow the powder around.

  • @TomokosEnterprize
    @TomokosEnterprize Před 4 lety

    Working with volumes like this that propane furnace is sure the way to go.

  • @ianbegg9851
    @ianbegg9851 Před 4 lety

    Awesome Explanations there Sreetips, I never get tired of watching your videos, and I appreciate the time you put into making them for us :-) Have a great day mate!

  • @Nikkerz232
    @Nikkerz232 Před 4 lety

    Have you thought about doing another eBay crystal sale? Your crystals are so beautiful. And the process just adds on to it, it looks simply magical with the crystals sitting in the electrolite solution.

  • @Card_Asylum
    @Card_Asylum Před 4 lety +2

    It's funny that you just posted this. I had 4 people message me today on Twitter congratulating me for winning that 5oz bar you gave away on Twitter. 🤔 Not sure what is going on with that. 🤣

  • @cristianrfs
    @cristianrfs Před 4 lety +2

    Hi Sreetips. Great video!!! So many useful information. I have an idea: you could make a video using electrolysis to get 100% pure silver, similar to your Electrolytic Gold Refining Cell video. You already have pure silver for the anode and you simply melt the cement silver for the cathod. What would be the electrolyte? Silver nitrate solution? That would be interesting to see and compare with the gold process. What voltage to use? Amps? How many time would it take to process 1 troy ounce? What shapes the pure silver would make on the anode side?

  • @hi-seas
    @hi-seas Před 4 lety

    Great recap!! Thanks Streetips!

  • @RedRedux
    @RedRedux Před 4 lety +2

    Usually send my scrap silver back to my supplier for credit but this looks like way more fun. 🤣

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

      What do they credit you sir as a percentage of spot?

    • @RedRedux
      @RedRedux Před 4 lety +2

      @@goldrefining it's usually just under market price to account for the refining cost I use rio grande jewelery supply

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +2

      @@RedRedux can't beat that! If your getting anything above 95% then that's the way to go. Large refiners operate on a small percentage (1-2 %) because chemicals are cheaper and plus.... They get to keep any other metals for free. Nitric right now is 45 cents a lb for 69% nitric. A gallon is about 11 lbs so about $5 a gallon (commercial pricing)

    • @chrisstebbins2203
      @chrisstebbins2203 Před 4 lety

      Wow I have nothing that's your idea of fun

    • @RedRedux
      @RedRedux Před 4 lety

      @@chrisstebbins2203 my life is pretty pathetic don't hate

  • @FromGregg
    @FromGregg Před 4 lety +2

    Are there any drawbacks to using a lower voltage and amperage to grow larger silver crystals? I know it will take longer. Also once the silver is precipitated out of the silver nitrate solution you can also use that same solution with two copper bars to make and grow pure copper crystals via electrolysis

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +4

      3.3 to 3.7 volts DC are the parameters that I leaned from the pros on the goldrefiningforum.com anything else runs the risk of other metals plating out with the silver and contaminating the beautiful pure silver crystals. Palladium is the main concern. It’s solubility in nitric makes it a candidate for cross contamination in the silver cell. A little Pd in the electrolyte won’t hurt silver purity. But if it builds up then it can start to plate out with the silver. Green electrolyte, instead of blue, is a tip off of palladium contamination of the electrolyte. I’ve been told that the silver can have as much as ten percent palladium in it before you’d notice any difference in your silver. While it’s bad for your silver purity, the real problem is this; palladium is one hundred times more valuable than silver!

    • @FromGregg
      @FromGregg Před 4 lety

      sreetips thanks for the advice... if the electrolyte is green wouldn’t that mean that the Palladium is not being precipitated out into the Silver crystals? (because it’s in the solution?) just like blue would mean that’s copper being refined out of the anode basket... ?

  • @shaneyork300
    @shaneyork300 Před 4 lety

    Another good silver cell video!!
    Have a GREAT Day My Friend!!!

  • @azradoksomtaaw9420
    @azradoksomtaaw9420 Před 4 lety

    Just a thought ... When you make the filter basket, it looks like a lot of waste filter material. You should make a basket, then pull out the shape you've cut off for the filter. Make a pattern from it. Then on your filter source material, see if you can't get more than one basket's worth from it.

  • @pavelhodosevich1151
    @pavelhodosevich1151 Před 3 lety

    Your videos are 9999 fine gold,
    thank you very much

  • @scrapperdscrapperj3948
    @scrapperdscrapperj3948 Před 4 lety +2

    Great information

  • @Sgalagan1
    @Sgalagan1 Před 4 lety +1

    great episode! thank you

  • @chrisstebbins2203
    @chrisstebbins2203 Před 4 lety

    I LOVE ALL YOUR UPLOADS!!!
    SO U KNOW I WATCH ALL YOUR UPLOADS UR THE BEST MAY HAVE MADE A FEW PEOPLE MAD BUT ONLY IF THEY DESERVED IT

  • @FromGregg
    @FromGregg Před 4 lety +10

    Just started mine two days ago

    • @FromGregg
      @FromGregg Před 4 lety +1

      Here’s what it looks like after increasing the voltage to 3.3v twitter.com/overclockthis/status/1304124830703325187?s=21

  • @TheMeditron
    @TheMeditron Před 4 lety +4

    What does the crystal silver feel like? Is it sharp and would poke you if you squeeze it? Or is it brittle and falls apart?

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +4

      It's brittle like glass, the small pieces, but will also poke the shit out of you too. The larger crystals are more malleable and not as bad.

    • @TheMeditron
      @TheMeditron Před 4 lety

      @@goldrefining Very interesting, thanks for the reply. How large can the crystals get under optimal conditions?

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +2

      @@TheMeditron According to the size of cell, current density, and 10 other things. I have has some in larger cells grow to 6 inches plus. Those are worth good money!

    • @chrisstebbins2203
      @chrisstebbins2203 Před 4 lety

      How stupid really come on really!!

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety

      @@chrisstebbins2203 ???

  • @Thingsthatgopew22
    @Thingsthatgopew22 Před 4 lety +1

    You should try to use a pipe and a dowel to compress that silver powder to suitable sized pucks. By compressing it you will remove most of the isolating air and save a great deal on gas spendages and also time waste. Just let it melt in the furnace then drop another puck in.

    • @benwinkel
      @benwinkel Před 4 lety

      Wouldn't that bring the risk of micro air pockets causing explosions?

    • @Thingsthatgopew22
      @Thingsthatgopew22 Před 4 lety +1

      @@benwinkel Nope, it will not compress to solid, just firm.

  • @N3uroi
    @N3uroi Před 4 lety

    I really like watching your videos @sreetips
    I have a few questions however. Excuse me if you already mentioned that in some other video.
    1. What do you do with the remnant of the dissolved shot in the anode baskets? I presume it's mostly copper/copper rich silver.
    2. Why do some of the silver shot pieces when they come out of the water look so yellow? It could not possibly be because of the copper, as there should be quite little in it, certainly less than in the sterling silver you start out with.
    3. I remember in some other video you said that you can typically reuse the electrolyte of the silver cell one more time. Couldn't you just knock down the already formed crystals in the cell to be able to run it a lot longer before dissasembling and maybe use up the electrolyte in one (larger) batch?
    4. Why do you run the cell at that low of a current? The surface area of the bowl should 0,1 m² at least, so the current density would only be 14 A/m². Some quick search tells me you can go up to ~300 A/m² without running into to much problems with copper contamination at the cathode. That would let you produce ~20 times the amount of silver in the same time. Even if you wouldn't increase it by that much, what's the reasoning for the low current? The Power Supply should be able to put out a lot more than the 5 W it does now.

  • @robinafoubister
    @robinafoubister Před 4 lety

    Your impure silver shot always reminds me of cornflakes. lol

  • @1988Mauritz
    @1988Mauritz Před 4 lety +1

    if you still can get the coin rolls for free at the bank the ones made from paper you should be able to make preloaded packages for the electric smelter and just pop them in. Or would that that that contaminate the silver to much? sorry if my spelling is off english isnt my first languge and its early morning here :P

  • @dazzadazza5255
    @dazzadazza5255 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you sreetips another fantastic video 👌

  • @dojahmastah7156
    @dojahmastah7156 Před 4 lety

    I love that your growing your own money literally lol fantastic!

  • @dropanatomicbombonchina2565

    That looks dangerous sir

  • @travismiller5548
    @travismiller5548 Před 4 lety

    Quit messing around with the lump of silver for an anode and line the anode bag with a conductive mesh that’s dilute nitric resistant, titanium maybe but gold mesh if you have to. It would be a slight pain weaving and or spot welding the wire, but you'd never have to worry about burning up your annode again. I use a titanium ”bag” (perf sheet, folded up) to plate copper... Saves a lot of small chunks from falling down into the slimes

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      The silver anode works perfectly and it can be used over and over as long as it’s kept out of the electrolyte. No need to fix it if it ain’t broke

  • @stevewoods8116
    @stevewoods8116 Před 4 lety +2

    ALWAYS LOVE YOUR CONTENT!!!

  • @charlestuozzo4747
    @charlestuozzo4747 Před 9 měsíci

    This seems like a cleaner end product compared to smelting.

  • @ProfaneGod
    @ProfaneGod Před 4 lety

    mbmmllc has an interesting design for a forge but it does look a little bit dangerous but you could maybe improve the safety of it for your use.

  • @TomokosEnterprize
    @TomokosEnterprize Před 4 lety

    Always iking the posts my friend. Your king is going to be shown soon. Fees sooooo good to be back pouring again.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Good to hear it Dean. Hang in there man!

    • @TomokosEnterprize
      @TomokosEnterprize Před 4 lety

      @@sreetips I got the repour done today and video'd. Now on to the saw ,files, sanding and polish. I will do bits and pieces of that as well. Have a great weekend my friend.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Dean I’m looking forward to seeing it.

  • @user-xc3xr4bq4q
    @user-xc3xr4bq4q Před 5 měsíci

    Great things I'm all about it .your the man

  • @tygrefyfe
    @tygrefyfe Před 4 lety

    I do enjoy your videos. Is there a reason you use two layers of the dacron bag for the anode basket? Knowing things can run expensive with the refining process, could you use one layer for the basket and stretch the use of filter bags? They might be cheap, but it would cut down on the expenditure regardless of those being fairly cheap to buy.

  • @damxgopak457
    @damxgopak457 Před 4 lety +1

    Brilliant!

  • @paulm2380
    @paulm2380 Před 4 lety

    Thank you. Great job.

  • @SilverWiskeyStones
    @SilverWiskeyStones Před 4 lety

    Next Step is Whispering everything you say, @Streetips. your foot is in the door for ASMR anyway.... you may as well commit. Love your content, Thank you for sharing!

  • @markpashia7067
    @markpashia7067 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey sreetips, I love what you do and you are way smarter than me on all these acids and such, but it bugs me when you get your numbers wrong. Sterling silver is labeled as "sterling" or 925 for a reason. It is 0.925 pure or 92.5% pure. Coin silver or "junk" silver US coins are ninety percent pure or 0.900 silver. Some older silver flatware was "coin silver" instead of "sterling silver" but that is rare to find these days. Also your cement silver is pretty pure but has some copper content so it is not 99% pure. It is somewhere between 92.5% and 99% pure and that is why it shows a slight copper color cast to it. Your pure crystal silver is almost certainly four nines fine, but without an assay that cannot be stated definitively so labeling it three nines is safe and probably understating it. Love that four nines fine!!! And you have it even though you have not paid a lab to certify that. Gotta love it. Thanks for all you do. Big refiners can run a massive large batch and just run one test to certify the whole batch and that makes the assay affordable. For a small guy with little batches it costs more than it is worth to do that. Great job though.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Quite correct, it’s true in theory. But as a refiner who actually processes 925/sterling silver, I’ve NEVER been able to get 92.5g of pure silver from 100g of sterling. It’s just not possible. It’s usually in the neighborhood of 88% to 90% - this is based on tens years experience and having refined hundreds of pound of silver.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Guardian Labs in the UK has certified a sample of my pure silver crystal as three nines by fire assay.

    • @markpashia7067
      @markpashia7067 Před 4 lety

      @@sreetips Fair enough. As I said "you are the man". All I know is the theory.

  • @patprop74
    @patprop74 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I still think you should find smaller bowls and let the silver attached to the bowl and pour clear blue resin( As close to the colour as the solution as possible) and sell as Art, It is really really beautiful in solution. Oh BTW, if possible perhaps add in some filler music when your mic is not active lol Keep having to make sure there is nothing wrong with the Audio on my end.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      The dead sound footage; I had the mic in my mask and it sounded awful so I just muted it. Soft music is a good suggestion. Didn’t think of it. Thank you

  • @Reasonist
    @Reasonist Před 4 lety

    You should put one of your Signature used shot boards up on eBay and see how much it goes for 🤟🏼🧐😆✌🏼

  • @alilionking2966
    @alilionking2966 Před 4 lety

    Hello
    Based on your experience, approximately 10 kg of sterling silver or antique jewelry contains approximately as much gold, palladium and platinum. We certainly do not know the exact number. An answer that is somewhat acceptable.
    If you say for 1 kg, I can equate
    I look forward to the answer

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      I’ve never calculated these amounts. I don’t know. Sorry

  • @Alrik.
    @Alrik. Před 4 lety

    I have watched all you videos at least once so I knew everything in the video already, but it's always fun to see more of!!
    Would melting in the furnace maybe go quicker if you left a little bit of molten metal in it before filling it with the next charge of cement silver?

  • @danielboone4304
    @danielboone4304 Před 4 lety

    Introducing Jay Stacking!!! Love sreetips. First video coming today. My clay molds and some if my stack.

  • @Falcata1973
    @Falcata1973 Před 4 lety +1

    Working on building a furnace, but I'm waiting on a little cooler weather. The heat in south MS is almost unbearable.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Here too!

    • @Falcata1973
      @Falcata1973 Před 4 lety

      @@sreetips dont know if you're done one or not, but can you do one on sim cards? I've collected quite a few.

    • @benwinkel
      @benwinkel Před 4 lety +1

      @@Falcata1973 He has done one on that.

    • @Falcata1973
      @Falcata1973 Před 4 lety +1

      @@benwinkel thank you brother! I'll look for it.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Před 4 lety +1

      I grew up down there. I miss the food, but I don’t miss the humidity!

  • @josephschnabel1andonly

    Hope all is well. Sure do miss your videos.

  • @jmarie5397
    @jmarie5397 Před 4 lety

    Amazing work and thank you for sharing.

  • @sh2040able
    @sh2040able Před 4 lety

    Eu sou do Brasil, gostei muito do vídeo. Como posso enviar as minhas dúvidas.?

  • @aboahmed6723
    @aboahmed6723 Před 4 lety +2

    What do I do melting pots I have a lot of them there are minutes of molten gold How was it possible to extract this gold Please reply Thank you for all the advice and information

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

      You can soak the melting dishes or crucible in a stainless pot of hot water and the borax should release the gold pellets. If hot water does not work add a little nitric to the solution and heat. Do not use ar or you gold will go into solution and soak up into the crucible or dish. That's not good! Once the pellets are free and separated you can then refine them.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +2

      I had no idea. Good info! I must have 50 dishes full of tiny balls of gold and silver

  • @nonopus3125
    @nonopus3125 Před 4 lety

    Sreetips, can I ask, what got you into refining? What was it that captured your imagination? I’d love to have a crack at it but don’t have the circumstances right now. Best wishes.

  • @adambuysyuckyhouses
    @adambuysyuckyhouses Před 4 lety +1

    Do u like to keep silver and gold as cement or bars? And why

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      I prefer silver crystal and gold shot. Easier to measure out a specific amount

  • @capt.stubby245
    @capt.stubby245 Před 4 lety

    I love wakin' up to another Sreetips video. I have a question. When I go to mow the yard I will often put your videos on autoplay. They play the entire time that I am out working. Does this added number of views help you like I think it does?

  • @Matt-re8bt
    @Matt-re8bt Před 4 lety +1

    Love your vids, Sreetips. Thank you.
    Out of interest, how many grams does your silver cell generate in a given period?

    • @robertjeffery3237
      @robertjeffery3237 Před 4 lety

      If I recall correctly, his last silver clean-out was 1.8 kg.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Any where from 1.2 to 1.8 kilos every ten days. I get two or three of those per month.

  • @disgruntledtoons
    @disgruntledtoons Před 4 lety

    At 8:48 there is a small crumb of cement silver resting on the edge of the melt dish. Kept worrying it would fall off and be scattered on the floor.

  • @Kardall
    @Kardall Před 4 lety +1

    I am just curious. Have you looked into a Devil Forge for melting massive amounts of silver?

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      I’ve checked but it was flimsy looking. One guy got it real hit trying to melt iron and it warped the furnace.

    • @chrisstebbins2203
      @chrisstebbins2203 Před 4 lety

      REALLY!!! Are you stupid 😘😂

  • @donaldtrumpbaby5493
    @donaldtrumpbaby5493 Před 4 lety +1

    Sir what can you say about MAXIMOB RO channel is true the very very much of his Gold found always in his you tube channel?

  • @richardtaylor8740
    @richardtaylor8740 Před 4 lety

    Thanks i really enjoyed your channel so interesting clever men 🙂

  • @mynameismudd420
    @mynameismudd420 Před 4 lety

    Divert part of your recirculating water over the wooden board. The thin sheet of water should stop anyting sticking.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      I used a board with nail holes. That’s what the silver is sticking to.

  • @dimwittflathead639
    @dimwittflathead639 Před 4 lety

    Maybe you should pump the water to the top of the board. It'll keep it from burning like yours is

  • @nicholassmith9900
    @nicholassmith9900 Před 4 lety +1

    Just a question for you. If you were just interested in refining silver alone. Could you melt down the 90/10 silver directly into shot & put it into the silver cell for refining ?

    • @pneumatic00
      @pneumatic00 Před 4 lety +3

      If you do that; the copper (from your sterling flatware) will consume the nitric acid in the cell over 3x as fast as does silver. So your nitric acid costs would rise dramatically, you would have to change out and tend to the cell a lot more often, and you would reach that point where copper would plate out faster. Should that happen, your charge of silver would become polluted and you'd have to start over with the melting and shotting. Since the cell takes maybe 10 days to run its course, if you start plating out copper overnight on day 3 or 4, you come in the next day and your silver is polluted. So it's just not the way to go.

    • @pneumatic00
      @pneumatic00 Před 4 lety +2

      @Power 2 Weight You can watch this for a more technical explanation, I don't think he explains all that well, but he DOES show the impact of excess copper in the electrolyte....and it sucks, it crushes how much silver you can process before bad stuff happens. czcams.com/video/CC9LO5WnuvU/video.html
      The simpler way to understand it is: Cu is a +2 ion, silver is a +1 ion. Copper nitrate is Cu(NO3)*2. Silver nitrate is AgNO3. So, a copper ion eats double the nitrate ions that silver does AND is more reactive than silver. So Cu just kills your nitric.

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

      @@pneumatic00 You are a wise man sir and have done your research.

  • @ivsongold322
    @ivsongold322 Před 3 lety

    Nice 👌

  • @mrdando
    @mrdando Před 4 lety

    Get a Ferrane. It would be lot cheaper on gas. Or one that burns oil. You can burn waste old engine oil

  • @dougdennis3681
    @dougdennis3681 Před 4 lety

    Audio is amazing!!

  • @stevenrowlandson4258
    @stevenrowlandson4258 Před 4 lety

    Sreetips are you working on something new? One thing I noticed about JUUL vaping devices is they appear to have gold fittings in the oil chamber and contact points for recharging and people tend to toss them when the devices run out of power or stop working for other reasons. In your opinion would they have much scrap value if one had enough of them? So far I've picked up 2 of them of which I retained one and a gold plated hoop that hangs from an ear. If you have a sharp eye you will literally find gold on the streets and sidewalks every now and then.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Agree, I’ve found many pieces in the grocery store parking lot.

  • @amandapodeszwa8387
    @amandapodeszwa8387 Před 3 lety

    Nice hat Sreetips! Your ol pal Mr.wormwood. dont know if you still remember me its been awhile.

  • @goldrefining
    @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

    Holler at me brother and I will tell you how to make a simple easy furnace where you can melt larger amounts for about a $100 bucks! Don't use a cheap crucible get you a salamander.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Salamander - got it

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

      @@sreetips I use induction now, but I have a old garbage can furnace lined with kawool that I can drag out to show you how easy it is. It uses a weed burner from harbor freight as a heat source and with a A3 or A2 salamander you can melt pounds at a time using a bbq grill propane tank. It's the bomb. It will make you throw rocks at that one you have now.

  • @colincrane4835
    @colincrane4835 Před 4 lety

    Get yourself a devil forge it will do all that silver powder in no Time a lot less mucking about with 3 torches and a small furnace

  • @SomervilleBob
    @SomervilleBob Před 4 lety

    Have you ever tried the cement silver as-is in your cell? Melting it into cornflakes just seems like an extra step.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Adding silver powder to the anode filter clogged it up and current flow dropped off rapidly.

  • @jnav777
    @jnav777 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @korpse6rinder
    @korpse6rinder Před 4 lety

    You should get some cookie cutters and grow the crystals into shapes. A silver crystal in the shape of a honey bear would be awesome.

    • @korpse6rinder
      @korpse6rinder Před 4 lety

      @Power 2 Weight it sounds possible right? Especially in these days of 3d printing. I have a few good ideas for better bowls for this process, if it's possible with 3d printing materials.

    • @korpse6rinder
      @korpse6rinder Před 4 lety

      @Power 2 Weight yeah it all depends on if they merge or if the just push into each other. Maybe let them grow until they start to touch and then weld the tips together and let it grow some more.

    • @RedRedux
      @RedRedux Před 4 lety

      @@korpse6rinder Weld?

  • @sierra-legacyavila
    @sierra-legacyavila Před 4 lety +1

    Would you consider selling some silver crystals? I would like to by a couple of troy ounces and add it to my silver stack.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +2

      Click on “about” on my channel for my email

  • @ImThatGuy17
    @ImThatGuy17 Před 3 lety

    Without revealing your net worth or too much info, what are some general number for total weights of silver and gold that you keep as investments from purifying like this? I'm fascinated with this type of refining and can only assume that you have been able to source much of your worth with the aid of your wife from yard sales and estate sales, etc. I'm sure you have beat the spot price significantly over the years and have rode the increases over the last few years!

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 3 lety

      I really don’t know. I’d have to go dig it up and throw it on a scale. I don’t keep track. It’s my hobby. But my kids are going to love it when I’m gone!

  • @amorite4404
    @amorite4404 Před 4 lety +1

    Yep

  • @999fine5
    @999fine5 Před 3 lety

    Hi @Sreetips, just a quick question, why don't you use the electric kiln more often for melting and casting your PMs'. thanks Sreetips.

  • @Falcata1973
    @Falcata1973 Před 4 lety

    Checking on you brother. Yall doing ok?

  • @mcplthivierge
    @mcplthivierge Před 4 lety

    ...kinda want to see a 'garage floor sweepings' refining series :)

  • @stewskinner5717
    @stewskinner5717 Před 4 lety +1

    Is it possible to add the cement silver to the silver cell anode basket directly without melting it first?

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +2

      NO! The silver will compact and restrict the flow of solution. This will lead to a BIG rise in voltage which is not got for several reasons. Don't reinvent the wheel, just roll with it. Lol

  • @dimwittflathead639
    @dimwittflathead639 Před 4 lety

    Oh yeah, I was wondering how you get the copper out of the nitric, add sodium hydroxide? Base metals have to be purified too.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Cement the copper on iron

  • @jayhawkmasonry
    @jayhawkmasonry Před 4 lety +1

    Your a master.

    • @goldrefining
      @goldrefining Před 4 lety +1

      @Power 2 Weight Actually a professional lab is not much different. The fundamentals are the same. You don't need a million dollars to do this and that's what he is teaching.

  • @UFObuilder
    @UFObuilder Před 3 lety

    Awesome

  • @NYREPS
    @NYREPS Před 4 lety +1

    Has molding metal ever blew back on your face or landing on skin?

  • @TheLemzia
    @TheLemzia Před 4 lety +1

    I'm still a bit confused. What happens to the copper in the Silvershot after the Electricity is passed through it? does it just stay in the basket and only the Silver goes into the Electrolyte and deposits on the side of the bowl?

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      No, the copper dissolves with the silver and stays in solution and does not plate out with the silver until it reaches about 60 grams per liter.

    • @TheLemzia
      @TheLemzia Před 4 lety

      @@sreetips So how are you keeping it below the 60g threshold? Is there a way to test for that?

  • @kevinhemming9420
    @kevinhemming9420 Před 2 lety

    What do you fill the stainless bowl with. I noticed you said earlier in this video you added distill water to prevent the silvee from vaporizing. So the electrolyte solution is made up of distill water and sodium or table salt to make the electric current or just plain water?

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 2 lety

      Silver nitrate - 600 grams of pure silver dissolved in 3.5 liters of liquid

  • @lightmagick
    @lightmagick Před 4 lety

    Can you still not find a more direct source of the Dacron for your filters? Sucks to have to buy those bags with so much waste.

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      The bag cost about $10 and I can run down to the hardware store and buy them. But finding a source to buy in bulk would be beneficial.

  • @questionator2
    @questionator2 Před 4 lety

    I hope more content is on the way, i can't take it much longer!

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety +1

      Working on one right now. Should post later today

  • @samuelesquivel856
    @samuelesquivel856 Před 4 lety

    Where do you get all the stuff for smelting and extraction and how much does a one time run of the process typically cost

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      Smelting, extracting metal from ore, is something I’ve never done before. I bought all the melting equipment at welding supply. Electric melting furnace on eBay. This is my hobby so I don’t calculate costs for each batch. Everything is done in a never ending stream and it’s all tied together.

  • @chrisp7641
    @chrisp7641 Před 4 lety

    Looks like it might be time for a new board.

  • @davenaumoff1911
    @davenaumoff1911 Před 4 lety

    Awesome! What a difference between before and after Love it. Not related can I use Sodium bisulfite in substitute for Sodium metabisulfite

    • @aa1.5
      @aa1.5 Před 4 lety

      No you can not. Sodium metabisulfite is Na2S2O5. Sodium bisulfite is NaHSO3 a totally different compound and will not reduce gold chloride

    • @davenaumoff1911
      @davenaumoff1911 Před 4 lety

      @@aa1.5 Thanks Mr. A G

  • @lancecpldave
    @lancecpldave Před 4 lety

    Hi i was thinking about buying a gold bar that is 1020 g that is from melted gold pins from computers and was wondering how much gold I could expect to refine down and get out of it

  • @socialexperimentgaming4808

    Silly question, since nitrates are great fertilizers, is there a way to turn some of the "cleaned" refining liquid waste into a fertilizer for home gardens?? 😬😬

    • @sreetips
      @sreetips  Před 4 lety

      I don’t know. Never experimented with that

  • @marcg9602
    @marcg9602 Před 4 lety

    Im a hobby silversmith. I have silver dust and fillings and sweeps. should I refine it myself? or sub it out? to you lol.