I will say that the term "recovery" can apply in mining operations. However, I never discuss any thing to do with mining. I got burned out, not on mining itself but on miners, after working with them almost daily for 2 years. I also think mining is very boring. I will never again have anything to do with miners unless they are someone knowledgeable like Reno Chris or Deano. Essentially I am a 100% gold and silver scrap guy.g_axelsson said:Chris, would you call using a wash plant in a mine to extract gold for refining?
Göran
Or do you simply say that it needs further refining?
I agree about the sampling and assaying.4metals said:In my opinion, which may be worth as much wind as it takes to say this, any process where you do not actually dissolve the target metal, is not refining but concentrating or recovery.
When I processed jewelers sweeps into sample able powders by incineration, crushing and sifting, that was not refining although many guys who call themselves refiners do process sweeps that way. When I melted the sweeps and recovered the PM's in a copper cell, that was refining. When gold buyers just melt and assay metal, that is not refining, really it is just sampling.
But at the end of the day, it's just more fun to end up with pure metal !!!!! :G (Unless it looks like this gold icon :| )
The purity required is all that matters, depending on the need, and return.4metals said:No metal is ever 100% pure, ever. In the end, how many nines do you want or need? It all comes down to cost.
I like 4metals definition that when you actually dissolve the metal it goes into refining... but then it would not apply to inquarting or even the Miller process and those are refining in my book.
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