ncclaymaker
Sr. Member
- Aug 26, 2011
- 370
- 316
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab 1000, A Motorized Power Glider Trike, 17 foot travel trailer behind my Jeep. 4" suction dredge/high banker.
- Primary Interest:
- Prospecting
Gold Well Sluice, Bernie's industrial strength tool for serious gold recovery.
Finally decided to stop loosing the North Carolina fine and flour gold. The only piece of equipment bought by me is a MacKirk Eureka sluice, which performed admirably, but it was never made for a four inch dredge. I simply exceeded the engineered capabilities of the sluice, which was not their fault, but mine. So after building and trying an underflow sluice, I found that it too had limitations, mainly material flow and water that had to be constant. At the beach, where materials are consistent, it should do just fine. Elsewhere or when flow variables are injected into the equation, the design flaws are apparent. Adjustments are required. I assume that one of the reasons one purveyor of this type of sluice has "plastic portals" so that the users can adjust the underflow blades.
So I finally decided to stop messing around and purchase an industrial strength tool for the job... the Gold Well from HM Research. Professional grade tools aren't cheap, this one's built to last. I took a few photos of the sluice while it's still a virgin... tomorrow we'll see if Bernie's Gold Well sluice can separate North Carolina silica from the flour/fine gold. I am classifying all of the dredge material to 0.25 inches as per Bernie's suggestion and we'll see what happens. I don't expect much recovery, as I am just outside of the Carolina Slate Belt. Who knows.
Here are a few shots of a virgin sluice...
View attachment 1247124View attachment 1247125View attachment 1247127View attachment 1247128
I'll either be uploading images of flour gold or mica tomorrow during the trials on the two stream on the land that I steward. Who knows?
Finally decided to stop loosing the North Carolina fine and flour gold. The only piece of equipment bought by me is a MacKirk Eureka sluice, which performed admirably, but it was never made for a four inch dredge. I simply exceeded the engineered capabilities of the sluice, which was not their fault, but mine. So after building and trying an underflow sluice, I found that it too had limitations, mainly material flow and water that had to be constant. At the beach, where materials are consistent, it should do just fine. Elsewhere or when flow variables are injected into the equation, the design flaws are apparent. Adjustments are required. I assume that one of the reasons one purveyor of this type of sluice has "plastic portals" so that the users can adjust the underflow blades.
So I finally decided to stop messing around and purchase an industrial strength tool for the job... the Gold Well from HM Research. Professional grade tools aren't cheap, this one's built to last. I took a few photos of the sluice while it's still a virgin... tomorrow we'll see if Bernie's Gold Well sluice can separate North Carolina silica from the flour/fine gold. I am classifying all of the dredge material to 0.25 inches as per Bernie's suggestion and we'll see what happens. I don't expect much recovery, as I am just outside of the Carolina Slate Belt. Who knows.
Here are a few shots of a virgin sluice...
View attachment 1247124View attachment 1247125View attachment 1247127View attachment 1247128
I'll either be uploading images of flour gold or mica tomorrow during the trials on the two stream on the land that I steward. Who knows?
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