Had a look at Blackwater (Snowy River) online. Now that's one exciting mine.
Haven't worked out how you can invest yet. Aussie Super fund comes up, then FZR (ASX) has like 2'percent.
It's a major project with ot of prep work completed.
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Had a look at Blackwater (Snowy River) online. Now that's one exciting mine.
Haven't worked out how you can invest yet. Aussie Super fund comes up, then FZR (ASX) has like 2'percent.
It's a major project with ot of prep work completed.
Good to read Federation's February's monthly update online with their interception of the Birthday Reef near Reefton. As mentioned before perhaps NTL could team with them in some way to utilise their proposed refining plant using concentrate transported down from Talisman.
I hope not, as that sounds like a bloody expensive option.
It will be interesting to see what other companies will be interested in toll treating such small amounts.
They will have to run trials to check compatibility of the plant & recovery rates.
I was hoping for a much higher concentrate than 1%, as then transport costs, even perhaps to Australia, wouldn't be a prohibitive.
There's just so much more detailed information we shareholders need to know where this is heading.
As I mentioned before, it's a speculative punt for me, as it can't be anything else without knowing even if they get the DOC approval, that they have a feasible & cost effective option to process the low grade concentrate into dore. In fact it would be irresponsible for the company to start mining without that in place.
You have possibly misunderstood what I am saying about concentration levels. My post last July referred to reducing the volume of ore 100 times eg a 6 tonne truck delivery would be reduced to 60 kg. Not then expensive at all to transport to Reefton (or wherever) with a ute.
Thanks.
Can you point me to the company announcement that mentions the 100:1 concentration of the original test plant results?
Or preferably link it. I looked back through the rights off document & I couldn't see it there.
What I did see in that capital raise offer, was that it clearly stated cashflow positive from production by the end of 2023.
Access to mine once work safe was ticked off. No mention of DOC approval required...
https://www.nzx.com/announcements/341267
Daytr I've attached the link with the pilot plant results which show 1000g/tonne of gold in the concentrate. With the JORC assessment estimating an average of 10g/tonne of ore in the mine this calculates to a 1000/10 = 100 improvement in the recovery rate of gold from the concentrate.
Maybe. No I'm not saying the ore feed was 1g/tonne. I'm dividing the test results by the estimated grade not multiplying. They were testing the concentrate at 1000g/t not the ore. The amount of gold in the mined ore comes from the JORC assessment which for round numbers sake I've said is 10g/t (conservative). I hear what you are saying about what is the ore feed, and this is not stated possibly as it was not the focus of the test. The ore feed will obviously vary given the variability of the amount of gold in each tonne of ore mined. Simply put if you have a bag of 1000 peas (the concentrate) and one is gold that is 100 times better than 10 gold peas in 1 million peas (the ore). If the concentrate test results produced two gold peas that is 200 times better than the average ore volume required to produce the same amount of gold etc..
Not disputing that at all as you are simply reading from the announcement. You need to understand it is describing a rate per tonne of concentrate not ore. 1 kg = 1000g. 1 tonne = 1000kg = 1 million grams. Therefore the rate of gold recovery from the concentrate is 1000g per 1 million grams ie 1 in 1000. (my analogy was 1 gold pea per 1000 peas). The JORC estimates 10g per 1 million grams of ore. Therefore we are comparing a recovery rate of 1000g from the pilot plant concentrate with 10g if we crushed and refined the ore. This is a 100 to 1 advantage using the concentrate. Therefore you need 100 times less volume of material (concentrate) than ore to win the same amount of gold. This is why concentrating first at the mine is a great idea to minimise cartage weight along the access road and across the bridge to the state highway. I'll leave it at that.
Yes I get what you are saying, I did the first time, but where are you getting your information if not from the announcement? It clearly says from ore not already concentrated ore.
The announcement says one thing, you are saying another. So where do you get your information from that differs from the announcement?
Don't get me wrong, I happy if you are right but I just need to see something from the company that backs up what you are saying.
As I have said on multiple occasions, all this pertinent information should be in one place. Well run exploration Companies that I used to bank used to reiterate their story and the necessary detail to make an informed opinion on the stock in every announcement and report.
This was so new parties reading for the first time could understand what was going on straight away without having to troll through every report going back years to get the information required to invest.
If you want the stock price to go up. Attract new investors with quality & easily accessible information.
Edit: what it does say in one of the quarterly reports that they are looking to produce a concentrate that they can smelt directly into dore. That suggests it's a very high grade concentrate. I wouldn't think the grade you are referring to would be able to be smelter directly.
Anyway, as I have said before.
So many unknowns.
Just reread the link I sent you. I'll quote from the second paragraph. " Two batches of concentrate, produced by passing ore which has been ground to less than 150 micron size (about the same fineness as cement powder), through the centrifugal concentrator and performing a cleanup on the shaker table, have been assayed by independent SGS laboratories yielding grades of 989g/t gold and 4,120g/t silver, and 876g/t gold and 2,800g/t silver respectively." Surely you can agree that the 1000g/tonne I quoted as a round number is a measure of the gold contained in the concentrate.
This is where I'm confused. Here you say they are producing a concentrate of 10kgs per ton.
Well I know where the confusion is.
You have said on numerous occasions that they are reconcentrating the 1kg per ton concentrate and what I keep saying is I don't get that from the announcement. And that I'm not getting it because I am reading straight from the announcement.
Where else am I supposed to get it from?
Sorry my math there is wrong. It should be 0.1 of a percent. I.e 1kg per 1000kgs.
Anyway I have no issue with what is stated as the concentrate from the announcement in 2019.
Where I am struggling is that you are saying it's then being reconcentrated to produce 10kg per ton concentrate.
Where has the company stated this?