This is a well.oiled machine you can really appreciate the work put into making this the best system possible for the ground you work. Refabricating our trommel and see things I wanna copy! Awesome setup
For the first time I see such a gateway system! I understand the oscillating part, and the next one with a subspecies of water from below the lock I do not understand. Is it designed to trap fine gold?
@skadill This is the small rig. The RMS Ross derocker will physically bury this setup. Takes boulders, tree stumps, logs, anything you can throw at it.
Great footage thank you for posting. May I ask why the (what looks like) plastic sheets running the length of the decks? With the riffles, do you find you capture more with it? First time I see that? Do you have to clean out more often due to getting full quicker? Thanks for any information and advice from your experience.
Each individual miner will come up with their own things. It's best to stick with Randy Clarkson's Riffle study which states let the gold free flow down the sluice without interruption except for the riffles. Those riffles (except for the perforated steel) work like science.
Jay Willow is right every operation has its quirks on sluices. My family has an original Clarkson study offer that my great grandparents got in the mail at the mine where he was using the radioactive gold tracers to study. I have replicated these riffles he suggests and with it setup the way we do, we find no gold past the first 6 ft of sluice after a week run.
@skadill we sold our orange trommel we built in Duncan to a miner in Dease Lake, because it ran pneumatic tires, and threw its drive chain because of this. It is still on Savona Machinery's webpage for sale, but it sold almost 2 years ago.
are you kidding me? Theyre great. Your a like minded guy doing exactly the same work as i do in a different country with a few different methods (wich by the way i have a adopted a few of them). Its great you take the time to film some of this stuff and share it with us and also great to know there is somebody as passionate about their work and logging and earthmoving machinery as i am. keep them coming dude right on.
how dose this mine run the only thing i see you guys got right is to have a dog on site your need to get a lest 10 guys doing nothing and one super mechanic that can't fix any thing. looks like it could be fun to be out there some day's when the sun shines.
This is a well.oiled machine you can really appreciate the work put into making this the best system possible for the ground you work. Refabricating our trommel and see things I wanna copy! Awesome setup
Very nice set up! I like all of your recovery systems in place!
Enjoyed that look around. A lot of thought gone into all that set up. Every spec a prisoner!
A lot of rounded rock and boulders! Great looking ground
For the first time I see such a gateway system! I understand the oscillating part, and the next one with a subspecies of water from below the lock I do not understand. Is it designed to trap fine gold?
@skadill This is the small rig. The RMS Ross derocker will physically bury this setup. Takes boulders, tree stumps, logs, anything you can throw at it.
Great footage thank you for posting. May I ask why the (what looks
like) plastic sheets running the length of the decks? With the riffles,
do you find you capture more with it? First time I see that? Do you
have to clean out more often due to getting full quicker? Thanks for
any information and advice from your experience.
Each individual miner will come up with their own things. It's best to stick with Randy Clarkson's Riffle study which states let the gold free flow down the sluice without interruption except for the riffles. Those riffles (except for the perforated steel) work like science.
Jay Willow is right every operation has its quirks on sluices. My family has an original Clarkson study offer that my great grandparents got in the mail at the mine where he was using the radioactive gold tracers to study. I have replicated these riffles he suggests and with it setup the way we do, we find no gold past the first 6 ft of sluice after a week run.
@skadill we sold our orange trommel we built in Duncan to a miner in Dease Lake, because it ran pneumatic tires, and threw its drive chain because of this. It is still on Savona Machinery's webpage for sale, but it sold almost 2 years ago.
@clovakid Thanks S. Thought Youd be into this.
most of my videos arent very exciting but thank you for your comment anyway. Why would you say it is near Kemess
are you kidding me? Theyre great. Your a like minded guy doing exactly the same work as i do in a different country with a few different methods (wich by the way i have a adopted a few of them). Its great you take the time to film some of this stuff and share it with us and also great to know there is somebody as passionate about their work and logging and earthmoving machinery as i am. keep them coming dude right on.
Thanks. These are just views in my day to day life over the years.
how dose this mine run the only thing i see you guys got right is to have a dog on site your need to get a lest 10 guys doing nothing and one super mechanic that can't fix any thing. looks like it could be fun to be out there some day's when the sun shines.
U dont need 10 guys to run an operation u watch too much gold fuss..I mean rush.
@89HitachiEx200 Thank you for the comment.
Work on your punctuation.
@gangesexcavating i will try
very impressive set up
@caterpillar941b we will see.
@89HitachiEx200 maybe thats because we know what we are doing.
@clovakid You're talking to the wrong guy. Tell that to them after 8pm, 5 drinks, and 4 rotations of Lady Gaga
@mog5858 what can I say to that.
@gangesexcavating
hahahaha cool video though
@caterpillar941b maybe your wrong
@mog5858 Take the time to work on your spelling and punctuation as well.
Clearly you're doing all this mining wrong. You need to go to the yukon a buy a vibrating screen deck off the side of the road.