A
ArizonaWren
Guest
Melted Gold & Silver
I was reading the Beekrock trilogy and a question came to mind; not really related to that subject, but I'm sure someone here can help.
My Father's house burned down a few years ago, the fire was very hot and the home was completely consumed. He had a safe that he built himself out of plate steel approx. 1" thick welded into a box with a standard, round safe door. Inside the safe he had about 50 Silver Dollars, 10 Krugerands, several smaller Gold Coins (Canadian Mapleleafs I think?), some bullets, knives and other miscellaneous items.
We salvaged the safe and had a Locksmith drill the lid so we could open it and retrieve the contents. As can be expected everything was melted together in the bottom of the box. We have a nice branch like clump of Silver with several part coins visable which makes for an interesting piece. We were unable to locate any of the gold coins or any gold at all.
We always assumed that the gold must have melted first and either went into the steel sides of the safe or the silver itself. A comment made in the Beekrock thread led me to believe this probably isn't correct. What are the melting points of these two metals? Is it possible that the gold would have completely melted away and gone into another metal when the silver did not completely melt?
I'm starting to wonder, memories being what they are, if the gold may have been someplace else in the house and not in the safe at all. We still have the safe, put a new lid on it and it functions great, we jokingly refer to it as the gold safe but a safecracker would be terribly disappointed if he heard us mention that and then broke into it as it is relatively empty now.
Any thoughts or information on the melting points would be greatly appreciated.
- Wren
I was reading the Beekrock trilogy and a question came to mind; not really related to that subject, but I'm sure someone here can help.
My Father's house burned down a few years ago, the fire was very hot and the home was completely consumed. He had a safe that he built himself out of plate steel approx. 1" thick welded into a box with a standard, round safe door. Inside the safe he had about 50 Silver Dollars, 10 Krugerands, several smaller Gold Coins (Canadian Mapleleafs I think?), some bullets, knives and other miscellaneous items.
We salvaged the safe and had a Locksmith drill the lid so we could open it and retrieve the contents. As can be expected everything was melted together in the bottom of the box. We have a nice branch like clump of Silver with several part coins visable which makes for an interesting piece. We were unable to locate any of the gold coins or any gold at all.
We always assumed that the gold must have melted first and either went into the steel sides of the safe or the silver itself. A comment made in the Beekrock thread led me to believe this probably isn't correct. What are the melting points of these two metals? Is it possible that the gold would have completely melted away and gone into another metal when the silver did not completely melt?
I'm starting to wonder, memories being what they are, if the gold may have been someplace else in the house and not in the safe at all. We still have the safe, put a new lid on it and it functions great, we jokingly refer to it as the gold safe but a safecracker would be terribly disappointed if he heard us mention that and then broke into it as it is relatively empty now.
Any thoughts or information on the melting points would be greatly appreciated.
- Wren