Please read Hoke's book.Captgm said:when melting gold jewerly can you mix 18kt and 14kt ,10kt together and melt them and use some borex to remover the other metals out ?
element47.5 said:Your cast iron crucible was likely used for lead. Much lower temperature, rather indifferent as to purity, a completely different animal.
You say you've looked around the 'net....you've found the best spot. Whether or not you can obtain the proper things you need locally is not what matters. You can always send away for them. What matters is that here, on this forum, you have access to literally hundreds of years of professional grade commercial experience. It's an incomparable resource. If you get advice or direction as to how to perform something, I can only urge you in strongest terms to pay close attention and follow the directions given. NONE of these veterans, if they had a suspicion that was an easier way, a cheaper way, would hesitate to try a new approach. They probably have, and they have returned to the tried and true methods. The folks who get into trouble are the ones who do not follow the recipes. Whether it is amateurish impatience, ego, thinking they know all about chemistry, goofballism thinking they heard it somewhere on the 'net that you can refine gold using leftover fishfood, over and over again, the people who bust their rear ends adhering to the specificed formulae get nice shiny buttons and those who don't get containers of toxic glop.
Lou said:You need more heat, Scotty!
Uhhhhh------no, that's not the "best way". It's just "a way", and I'd never make that recommendation. I see no need for the tissue paper, and I damned well couldn't justify the time needed for the furnace to come to heat. I melted, literally, thousands of ounces of re-refined gold, using nothing more than a large melting dish and Hoke torch (by choice, after having experimented with an electric furnace). I could melt 50 ounces quicker than you could get the furnace up to heat.ffunky said:Best method is to use an electric furnace with a graphite crucible. If it is very fine (refined gold in powder form) you can first put it in some little bit of tissue paper and gently put in the furnace before heating.This will ensure that all the fine gold melt and stick together.(FFunky-A black african monkey from kenya with Gold)
Higoldsilverpro said:I've never used Mapp gas but I have used propane/O2, acetylene/O2, and natural gas/O2 many times. In all of these the trick is to first hold the tip of the flame about a foot away and then bring the tip of the flame slowly closer. At some point, you will see a crust forming on the gold. Then, you slowly work the flame closer and closer. At some point, you can get really close and melt the gold. When I first started, I blew out the powder. Now, I don't lose anything. The crust is all important.