A stock pot is for solutions that you have precipitated precious metals from. After precipitating the precious metals, you should evaporate the solution down to concentrate any trace PM's left in the solution. Stop short of crystals forming. If crystals do form, add enough water to dissolve them. If the solution gets cloudy, add a little HCl until it clears. This is what goes in the stock pot. If you need a five gallon bucket, you are either processing a lot of material or you are doing something wrong. Waste solutions such as old AP or washes and rinses, should be treated as waste and disposed of. There is no need to put this solution in your stock pot. Rinses and washes can be evaporated to the point of crystals forming. In other words, rinses and washes can be evaporated very nearly gone leaving very, very little behind. Old AP should have the copper cemented out of solution and then the solution should be evaporated to just before crystals begin to form and then neutralized. Decant the salty water and discard while the solids goes to the chemical dump. You cemented copper will hold any PM's, how ever unlikely there is that any PM's will be in it. A true to the word stock pot should only hold small to medium amounts of solution at a time. You keep solid copper in it all the time or add fine iron filings to remove any PM's at one go. Empty and process when it nears a certain point whether half full or three quarters full. Clean it up and start over. If you have room for buckets of solution to just hang out over extended periods of time, disregard everything I just typed.