lazersteve said:
I love the yields, I hate the work required to pluck the bands.
The bands are typically filled with green/gray grime and grease so I wear a mask and gloves when plucking the tops. The gloves keep my fingers from getting injured and infected with someones old skin or who knows what.
I've processed over a hundred pounds in the last three years and still have more to pluck at the moment. It's nice to have the scrap, it sucks to do the time plucking the tops.
Could be worse, I could be looking for scrap to process.
Steve
I got around that issue by stripping them in cyanide, using a stainless steel cathode. Much like a Thum cell, the watch bands were placed in a plastic basket, with a titanium attachment placed on top of the bands, which were submerged in about two inches of solution. Spacing between the anode and cathode was roughly 1½" as I recall. I kept the fluid level just below the attachment. The process strips the gold, along with some of the base metals, both of which firmly attach to the stainless plate.
When I had finished processing the lot in question, the values were stripped from the plate with a razor blade. They came off as thin pieces, rather brittle. The residue was then given the customary acid treatment and refining.
In order to insure that all of the gold was stripped, I tended to allow the bands to remain in the stripping cell until the copper based alloy was well consumed. The basket was dumped and re-filled a few times to insure that all bands were being stripped.
Nice part of this system is it runs silently, without much attention, allowing you to do other things. Very little time is dedicated to the stripping operation.
Harold