Description
TurboPan Gold Prospecting Tools 16″ Black Plastic Gold Pan for Sluice Panning
This black Gold Pan is the right piece of prospecting equipment that gets all the gold easily and quickly.
The TurboPan gold pan is a prospecting tool and mining tool for the prospector and artisan miner involved in small scale mining.
Whether you’re a hobbyist out looking for a run or a crevice filled with gold, or gold panning for a living in a developing country, TurboPan is the right piece of prospecting equipment that gets all the gold easily and quickly.
TurboPan eliminates the problem of compaction that happens in the traditional “Klondike” pan because it is basically a circular sluice.
TurboPan doesn’t require running water like a sluice, it simply maximizes the effects of gravity. Its shallow depth means it can be used in puddles and troughs.
Do yourself a favor. Upgrade to a TurboPan, and make your gold panning as successful as it can be. It may be the best investment in your panning you will ever make.
The TurboPan gold pan gets the gold and heavy minerals to the bottom of the pan and into a central trap quickly because the pan is shallow. The TurboPan is only around 5cm deep on the edges.
It acts just like a “sluice in a pan” – trapping all the gold in its extensive riffle system. You’ll improve your panning prospects with TurboPan. It’s a better way to pan for gold!
Instructions
Place dirt into pan. It is best to only fill it 3/4 full, which is about 6kg. Ensure the concentric riffles are on the side away from you. These are the clean up riffles.
Submerge pan underwater completely, holding the pan on each side. Rotate pan clockwise and anti-clockwise very quickly for about 5 seconds. This is to get the water to go right through the dirt and start the saturation process.
Hold the pan with one hand. With your other hand, stir the dirt in the central collection trap, checking for compaction and clay where the water has not fully penetrated. Stir the dirt by hand until you’re satisfied complete saturation has occurred.
Move the pan in an anti-clockwise motion so that the load moves inside the pan anti-clockwise. The purpose of this is to get the dirt moving over the spiral riffles so that the gold will work its way into the grooves. It is important to go anti-clockwise so that the clays in suspension will not compact against the steep sides of the spiral riffles. An initial sharp movement helps to get the dirt moving. Swirl in an anti-clockwise direction for 25-30 seconds.
Alternate between a centering swirl to get the “heavies” into the middle and the “lights” to the surface and outside, then an ejection swirl. It is normal for a little dirt to fly out of the pan at the edge. If a lot is going out, slow down your swirling rhythm so that only a small amount flies out with each swirl. Keep swirling until the amount of material left just covers the central trap. There are several techniques for using this pan – and scraping out the waste by hand is one of them – but this is not recommended for beginners.
Shake the pan vigorously forwards and backwards and from side to side for 10 seconds, to get the gold down off the clean-up riffles, so all the gold is in the central trap.
While shaking the pan from side to side, tilt the pan forward and allow dirt to run out of the front of the pan. Ensure clean-up riffles are at the front of the pan – away from you.
After half the dirt has been ejected, center the pan again, do a few more clockwise swirls and repeat steps 6 & 7.
Work out your own careful clean up technique for reducing concentrate to gold only or mostly gold only.
Pick out nuggets. Pick up large flecks of gold by firstly drying your hand, wetting the end of your finger with saliva, and picking them up with the end of your finger. Place them into a jar, vial, etc.
It’s best to suck up gold fines and dust with a plastic squirter bottle that has a tube from the mouth of the bottle to the bottom of the bottle.