bmgold2
Well-known member
Since my quantities of gold bearing materials are very limited and I don't want to end up with a lot of waste to figure out what to do with, I decided to make a miniature version of LaserSteve's sulfuric stripping cell.
What I did was use a small glass candle holder that I got from the Dollar store and a lead cathode that I had made several years ago when I first joined this forum but never used. The cathode was bent over the edge of the square glass container and I added around a half a cup of concentrated sulfuric acid (Liquid Fire drain cleaner).
With my very small pile of gold plated pins and wires I processed them in this micro sized device one by one until I was left with only the ones that didn't have enough non-plated sections left to grip with the alligator clip. These will have to wait until I have enough to buy a piece of copper mesh from Steve.
Each pin only took between a second and maybe a few seconds to completely strip. I am happy I didn't try processing them in AP which would have taken longer and produced much more waste. My sulfuric acid is very dark now but I expect it to clear back up as the gold settles out. It will be a long time before I have enough powder to worry about recovering the gold but now I know the process works and will slowly gather up more material to run through the cell. In the meantime, I only have the half cup of acid to store instead of jars or buckets of used AP.
I used a variable voltage/current power supply I had from a plating project which has a maximum current of 3 amps. For this small cell that was plenty. I didn't try it but I think even a cheap wall wart type power supply would have worked or the normal car battery charger. Doing 1 pin at a time I never went over 1 amp and most only took 10-30 mA for the second or two it was deplating.
I'm not saying everyone should start this small but for the many beginners like me with limited materials to process this seems to work. You wouldn't want to run pounds of pins at a time in such a small cell but for a test device I'm happy with how it turned out. It may be all I ever need unless this becomes more than just a hobby/learning experience.
My candle holder didn't come with a cover so I plan to store my used acid in a jar and the lead cathode in another one with distilled water. You might notice that I had my micro cell in a plastic gold pan just in case anything spilled. It didn't but better safe than sorry. Concentrated sulfuric acid is some scary stuff and now it has a little gold powder in it so I don't want it to get away IF something goes wrong. I know nobody likes being told over and over but BE CAREFUL.
Thanks LaserSteve and everyone on this forum. I can't believe I waited this long to try the stripping cell.
What I did was use a small glass candle holder that I got from the Dollar store and a lead cathode that I had made several years ago when I first joined this forum but never used. The cathode was bent over the edge of the square glass container and I added around a half a cup of concentrated sulfuric acid (Liquid Fire drain cleaner).
With my very small pile of gold plated pins and wires I processed them in this micro sized device one by one until I was left with only the ones that didn't have enough non-plated sections left to grip with the alligator clip. These will have to wait until I have enough to buy a piece of copper mesh from Steve.
Each pin only took between a second and maybe a few seconds to completely strip. I am happy I didn't try processing them in AP which would have taken longer and produced much more waste. My sulfuric acid is very dark now but I expect it to clear back up as the gold settles out. It will be a long time before I have enough powder to worry about recovering the gold but now I know the process works and will slowly gather up more material to run through the cell. In the meantime, I only have the half cup of acid to store instead of jars or buckets of used AP.
I used a variable voltage/current power supply I had from a plating project which has a maximum current of 3 amps. For this small cell that was plenty. I didn't try it but I think even a cheap wall wart type power supply would have worked or the normal car battery charger. Doing 1 pin at a time I never went over 1 amp and most only took 10-30 mA for the second or two it was deplating.
I'm not saying everyone should start this small but for the many beginners like me with limited materials to process this seems to work. You wouldn't want to run pounds of pins at a time in such a small cell but for a test device I'm happy with how it turned out. It may be all I ever need unless this becomes more than just a hobby/learning experience.
My candle holder didn't come with a cover so I plan to store my used acid in a jar and the lead cathode in another one with distilled water. You might notice that I had my micro cell in a plastic gold pan just in case anything spilled. It didn't but better safe than sorry. Concentrated sulfuric acid is some scary stuff and now it has a little gold powder in it so I don't want it to get away IF something goes wrong. I know nobody likes being told over and over but BE CAREFUL.
Thanks LaserSteve and everyone on this forum. I can't believe I waited this long to try the stripping cell.