How to melt up scrap gold and make two wedding rings
Written by Admin on December 11, 2010Customer supplied us with the antimonial to find up member infant matching start rings with a unequalled artefact revilement into them and a apportionment sequential into apiece of the rings.
Originally posted 2010-02-10 13:30:02. Republished by Old Post Promoter
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20 Comments to “How to melt up scrap gold and make two wedding rings”
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12:58 pm on February 11th, 2010
Out of curiosity, how much was that gold bar you melted at the start worth?
12:42 pm on February 14th, 2010
That is suprisingly cool
2:42 pm on February 15th, 2010
Thanks for the comment ~ Mr Golden Ozuro… its just practice practice practice
10:49 am on February 16th, 2010
Aha roughly 700 degrees for 9ct gold but you dont really take much notice of the temperature you just keep turning the torch up until it melts…
1:28 am on February 19th, 2010
Wow ur real good men
,
ill try hard to become so good as you are =D
8:07 am on February 20th, 2010
Hey, I am using an oxygen/propane torch, it’s a miniature welding torch.
4:52 am on February 23rd, 2010
hey this video is very cool! what kind of torch are you using?
11:25 am on February 23rd, 2010
Yeah, thanks
6:24 pm on February 25th, 2010
Melting point:
(1064.18?°C, 1947.52?°F)
Boiling point:
(2856?°C, 5173?°F)
hope this helps
8:02 pm on February 26th, 2010
Cool, very informative!!
11:33 am on February 28th, 2010
Boiling point, but i meant melting point
2:12 am on March 1st, 2010
What do you mean by BP ?
6:21 am on March 1st, 2010
what’s the BP of gold?
2:06 pm on March 4th, 2010
melt the gold and run it into the ingot mold as quick as you can and it should work you can heat the ingot mold up too which helps..
1:29 am on March 8th, 2010
You were just lucky or was the part where u heated the ingot cut out?
Because if I dont heat that one up aswell the melted gold/silver wouldnt make it all the way to the bottom of the ingot.
6:30 am on March 8th, 2010
more interesting the sxe phil
9:59 pm on March 11th, 2010
WOAH!!!!!!!!
4:49 pm on March 13th, 2010
Like a Redox reaction?
5:19 pm on March 15th, 2010
Hi I will try to give a brief explanation for you. When the metal is soldered the propane in the flame oxidises onto the metal making it black then the rings are left in an acid bath which eats the oxidisation then they are highly polished with different polishing compounds on mops to get the high shine
4:34 pm on March 18th, 2010
Thanks for posting this! I had a question about the color of the gold after it’s welded into the rings though. Why does is look so dark at that point, and how do you get it to shine again? I only ask because it started out so shiny as a watch, then looked very dull, only to come out shiny again at the end. Thanks!