cyberdan
Silver Member
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2006
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- Location
- Very Northern Left Coast
- Detector(s) used
- XLT & Bigfoot
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- All Treasure Hunting
- #1
Thread Owner
I just want to let you all know about an experiment I did this last week.
I bought 3 WEIGHTED sterling candlesticks. I knew that a majority of the weight was in the base. Some kind of weighted epoxy cement was poured inside to give it strength.
I wanted the silver and didn't care about the candlesticks. I didn't keep good notes but I should have.
I weighed two of them on my postage scales at 20 ounces (not troy) and proceded to demolish them. It was quite easy. The entire candlestick is a very thin sterling shell completly filled with an epoxy or resin. I weighed the silver after words and got 2 ounces troy. So about 10% of the weight is silver. Cost $27 silver value when I bought was $26 so I lost a bit. (for now, silver will go back up)
I have one more candlestick and I will take better notes to see if 10% is consistant.
I bought 3 WEIGHTED sterling candlesticks. I knew that a majority of the weight was in the base. Some kind of weighted epoxy cement was poured inside to give it strength.
I wanted the silver and didn't care about the candlesticks. I didn't keep good notes but I should have.
I weighed two of them on my postage scales at 20 ounces (not troy) and proceded to demolish them. It was quite easy. The entire candlestick is a very thin sterling shell completly filled with an epoxy or resin. I weighed the silver after words and got 2 ounces troy. So about 10% of the weight is silver. Cost $27 silver value when I bought was $26 so I lost a bit. (for now, silver will go back up)
I have one more candlestick and I will take better notes to see if 10% is consistant.