gunDriller
4th December 2011, 05:55 PM
I have a cupful of brown in the bottom of the measuring cup I used to do a precipitation.
The brown is gold, from gold plating on PCB's.
But now that I want to melt it into a bead - I need to transfer it to a melting dish or a crucible. I have watched the LazerSteve videos 3 to 5 times each. I'm done with the siphoning, now I want to melt.
But to do that, I have to transfer the precipitant to a melting dish or crucible.
It is sitting on top of the fireplace at about 100 degrees F, drying out after siphoning. Then there was some salt I chased around using a spray bottle with distilled water, then I used a square of TP to remove that.
http://oi42.tinypic.com/mkgklu.jpg
There's not a whole bunch of it (the brown deposit). Normally, I would just invert the measuring cup, tap out the substance onto a piece of paper, crease the paper, and slide it into the crucible with the help of gravity.
But I have a feeling that if I do that with this, I will lose a bunch of the precipitant, a treasured brown powder.
I was thinking of reinforcing the glass cup on the sides with Gorilla tape, a special kind of duct tape. Then if the cup breaks when it's heated, it's position will hopefully not change much.
Anyway, I was thinking of putting the glass cup on a hot plate for a pre-heat, and then using a torch to hopefully apply some 2000 F to the precipitant to get it to melt. I know this might break it, but if I get some decent small gold beads out of it, I could live with that.
It seems logical to do the precipitation in a container than is suitable for both the precipitation & siphoning AND the melting of the precipitant.
The brown is gold, from gold plating on PCB's.
But now that I want to melt it into a bead - I need to transfer it to a melting dish or a crucible. I have watched the LazerSteve videos 3 to 5 times each. I'm done with the siphoning, now I want to melt.
But to do that, I have to transfer the precipitant to a melting dish or crucible.
It is sitting on top of the fireplace at about 100 degrees F, drying out after siphoning. Then there was some salt I chased around using a spray bottle with distilled water, then I used a square of TP to remove that.
http://oi42.tinypic.com/mkgklu.jpg
There's not a whole bunch of it (the brown deposit). Normally, I would just invert the measuring cup, tap out the substance onto a piece of paper, crease the paper, and slide it into the crucible with the help of gravity.
But I have a feeling that if I do that with this, I will lose a bunch of the precipitant, a treasured brown powder.
I was thinking of reinforcing the glass cup on the sides with Gorilla tape, a special kind of duct tape. Then if the cup breaks when it's heated, it's position will hopefully not change much.
Anyway, I was thinking of putting the glass cup on a hot plate for a pre-heat, and then using a torch to hopefully apply some 2000 F to the precipitant to get it to melt. I know this might break it, but if I get some decent small gold beads out of it, I could live with that.
It seems logical to do the precipitation in a container than is suitable for both the precipitation & siphoning AND the melting of the precipitant.