Prospecting tools/methods usually have the dual and sometimes conflicting objectives of convenient portability and effectively capturing desirable mineral particles. Effectiveness may be measured, among other criteria, by the time required to yield certain positive results. Better results may be achieved in less time when a miner can arrive more quickly to a prospecting location, spend less time setting up and cleaning up prospecting equipment, and when the location is more laden with desirable mineral particles. However, since placer mining has existed for centuries and the desirable mineral particles in many more easily accessible locations have already been discovered and gathered, many recreational placer miners today are motivated to access remote locations to find hitherto undiscovered desirable mineral particles.
Transporting all of a miner's prospecting equipment in one trip to a remote location is not always easy, regardless of whether a miner utilizes a traditional sluice box or a high banker, which are just two common pieces of placer mining equipment. A typical sluice box funnels water and mineral deposit through a sluice into a box, forming an artificial channel. Since more desirable mineral particles are often heavier and therefore fall more quickly to the sluice box floor, riffles and matting are usually located along the sluice box floor to trap such desirable mineral particles. To increase effectiveness, some sluice boxes incorporate additional or lenghtened areas of matting and/or riffles, often called stages, which the slurry must pass through before exiting the sluice box.
Most sluice boxes are limited to use in or contiguous to water sources, which can present certain disadvantages. For example, using a sluice box to prospect mineral deposit any distance away from a stream can be laborious, time-consuming, and even impractical. Moreover, depositing the slurry back into the water source can cause harm to the environment by, for example, disrupting a potentially fish-bearing ecosystem. Consequently, miners often prefer to utilize high bankers for prospecting. High bankers incorporate spray bars, hoses or pipes, and pumps or motors to transport water from a water source to a sluice box located a certain distance away from the water source, thus sparing a miner from having to carry each load back to the water source, and also allowing the slurry to exit a high banker on dry land, safely away from the water source. Nevertheless, due to the additional parts and weight of all the equipment required to prospect using a high banker, high bankers (especially average-sized, multi-stage high bankers) are less easily portable than typical sluice boxes. Due to all of their additional parts, high bankers also generally take longer to set up and clean up than sluice boxes.
Some placer mining apparatuses attempt to avoid dependence on external water sources altogether by using alternative methods of separating the desirable mineral particles from the undesirable, yet these usually share some of the portability disadvantages inherent to prior art sluice boxes and high bankers generally. That is, it is often difficult for one miner by him or herself to simultaneously transport an average-sized placer mining apparatus, and all other necessary prospecting equipment, in one trip, to a potentially remote prospecting location.
It would be beneficial if a lightweight, multi-stage placer mining apparatus existed that was effective at prospecting yet could be carried, along with all necessary prospecting equipment, easily and comfortably by one miner. It would also be desirable if such a placer mining apparatus could be set up, cleaned up, and taken down relatively easily and quickly, and if (in its high banker embodiment) it conserved energy and water.
A placer mining apparatus structured to be folded in or as a backpack so that, when in its folded position the hopper functions as the compartment of the backpack, wherein prospecting equipment may be secured or placed. The hopper may, in one embodiment, be of sufficient size to allow an average-sized shovel to easily place material therein. As described in greater detail below, when the apparatus is in its folded position, one portion or side may serve as the frame of the backpack to which shoulder straps may be attached, and which may be placed against a miner's back or shoulders, in such a manner that the movement of the person carrying the apparatus-backpack is not limited (e.g., the apparatus does not interfere with motion the miner's legs, the width of the high banker backpack does not protrude substantially beyond the lateral body width of the miner, etc.). In addition, the apparatus may be set up/unfolded surprisingly quickly and easily, without many separate parts having to be assembled prior to operation. Once a prospecting session is completed, desirable mineral particles captured by the apparatus may be gathered, and cleaning and folding may take place in a relatively quick and easy manner.
Each stage incorporated by the apparatus may present certain advantages relating to effectiveness, portability, and quicker set up and clean up. The first stage, for example, may be comprised of a classifier (over a grizzly screen) and a hopper. In one embodiment, the size of the hopper may accommodate a normal sized-shovel. The hopper may be open ended on one side to allow exiting of larger stones. The hopper in one embodiment may be box-shaped, and opposite from the open ended sided of the hopper may be a closed side, which when the apparatus is in its folded position as a backpack, may serve as the floor of the backpack compartment, upon which prospecting equipment may rest or above which prospecting equipment may be secured. In one embodiment, the dimensions of the hopper when serving as the backpack compartment may be sufficient to accommodate a five gallon plastic pail, which pail may be fastened more securely by means of straps.
When unfolded and in a ready-for-prospecting position, the first stage may be supported one or more supporting stands. For example, one smaller hopper supporting stand may adjust the angle of inclination of the first stage by propping up the back end (or receiving end) of the hopper. A steeper angle of inclination may allow gravity to assist in carrying the mineral deposit in a downward direction towards the open side (or discharge end). The discharge end of the hopper may be held in an elevated position (above the next stage(s)) by a large supporting stand, which may be attached to the front or discharge end of the hopper. In one embodiment, this large supporting stand, when the apparatus is in a folded position, may be the upper portion of the frame of the backpack. In one embodiment, the side of the large supporting stand that is placed on a ground surface when the apparatus is in an unfolded position, may be wider than the top side, which top side may be connected with the discharge end of the hopper. Said shape may not only provide greater stability, but may also be configured to distribute weight over a certain surface area of a miner's back and shoulders. In addition, when the apparatus is in its folded position, said large supporting stand/backpack frame may be located against or opposite the underside of the hopper surface (above which the classifier is placed), where a substantial portion of the weight of the high banker backpack and prospecting equipment may be located. Shoulder straps may attach to the apparatus in its folded position and in one embodiment said straps may attach to the large supporting stand/backpack frame. The hopper and supporting stands and other components of certain embodiments of the apparatus may be comprised of lightweight yet durable material, such as in one embodiment light gauge aluminum.
The classifier may allow sufficiently small mineral particles to pass therethrough. In one embodiment, this may be accomplished by an aluminum punch plate perforated with holes. The classifier may also be easily removable to facilitate cleaning (and for dislodging small stones that may become lodged within the holes)—in one embodiment, by simply loosening two small bolts and wing nuts.
Smaller particles of mineral deposit may pass through the classifier to the second stage, while larger particles may slide off the open side/discharge end of the hopper. In an embodiment where the placer mining apparatus is a high banker, the discharged material may fall onto a ground surface. Due to the shape and position of the large supporting stand, in one embodiment (incorporating such a stand), these larger rejected particles may slide down and around the large supporting stand in a somewhat controlled manner, and may be positioned with the aid of a shovel to provide additional stability to the large supporting stand. In such a high banker embodiment, the first stage may also comprise a spray bar, which may be comprised of lightweight yet durable material such as, in one embodiment, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) piping.
The size of the first stage parts of the high banker embodiment may also lend to convenient portability and water/energy conservation without substantially sacrificing effectiveness. Specifically, the parts may be designed to accommodate less water flow than prior art high bankers having similarly-sized hoppers. For example, in one embodiment, the spray bar may be comprised of ¾″ PVC piping rather than 1″ piping, thereby requiring less water volume to pass through the spray bar without substantially diminishing water pressure. In addition, with less water volume required, the smaller PVC pipe may allow pumping by a potentially lighter and less energy-consuming pump, such as in one embodiment a one-inch outlet pump
The second stage of the apparatus may comprise all or a portion of a sluice box, and may fold compactly on top of the support stand, which then may both fold under the backside of the first stage so that the apparatus may be carried as a backpack in the manner described above. In an embodiment of the apparatus comprising at least three stages, the second and third stages may both comprise portions of a sluice box and each stage may incorporate distinct designs for trapping different ranges of sizes of desirable mineral particles. The second stage, in one three-stage embodiment, may incorporate certain features intended to capture larger, heavier, and/or coarser desirable mineral particles. One such feature is a second stage angle of inclination that is steeper than that found in the prior art. For example, in some embodiments, the angle of inclination of the second stage with respect to a ground surface may be between 15 and 25 degrees (and in one embodiment may be about 20 degrees) from the horizontal axis of a ground surface. A steeper angle of inclination may also result in less trapping of undesirable mineral particles in proportion to desirable particles.
This steeper angle of inclination may be achieved, in one embodiment, by the second stage portion of the sluice box being attached on one end to the large supporting stand and being attached on the other end to a smaller back supporting stand. In one embodiment of the apparatus, the smaller supporting stand supporting the receiving end of the hopper may be connected to the second stage portion of the sluice box in a manner to provide stability, and/or in another embodiment, to minimize the size required of the small supporting stand. In one embodiment, the angles of inclination of the first, second, and any additional stages may vary by adjusting the positions of the stages with respect to the supporting stands.
In an at least three-stage embodiment, the second stage may also incorporate riffles designed to trap larger, heavier, and/or coarser desirable mineral particles. For example, in one embodiment the riffles may be shorter in height and more horizontally curved against direction of the water flow than prior art riffles, which, possibly in combination with the steeper angle of inclination, may present certain advantages. In some embodiments, the height of the riffles may range from about 0.3-0.6 inches. The riffles may also be, in one embodiment, fixed in place, thus decreasing the steps required for assembling/disassembling the high banker. Such non-removable riffles may also provide strengthening support to the structure of the second stage portion of the sluice box, without the sluice box having to be comprised of heavier material. Desirable mineral particles captured in the second stage riffles may be gathered using either a snuffer bottle or simply by using water to rinse out the particles into a container.
The width of the second stage portion of the sluice box may be substantially narrower than the width of the hopper. This narrower width may make the second stage lighter than a wider second stage sluice box. In addition, the narrower second stage width may also allow a more consistent water and slurry flow over the riffles when there is less water flow volume generated. The second stage portion of the sluice box may also be quite long, thus increasing the opportunity for trapping desirable mineral particles. In one embodiment, the length of the second stage of the sluice box may be about 36 inches.
In a high banker embodiment, the narrower width and the steeper angle of inclination of the second stage may be an energy-efficient means of increasing the velocity and consistency of slurry flow without requiring a stronger pump to generate additional force.
Rather than repeat the same basic features and dimensions of a prior stage such as the second stage, embodiments of the apparatus comprising at least three stages may comprise stages incorporating distinct features designed for trapping different sizes of desirable mineral particles. For example, as opposed to a second stage designed to trap larger, heavier, and/or coarser desirable mineral particles, a third stage may be designed to capture smaller, lighter, and/or finer desirable mineral particles. Such third stage features may accomplish this objective by, in one embodiment, causing the flow of the water and slurry to slow down, for example, by having a substantially less steep angle of inclination than the second stage, and by the third stage portion of the sluice box being wider than the second stage. The angle of inclination, in some embodiments, may vary between 5 and 15 degrees (and in one particular embodiment, 10 degrees) from the horizontal axis of a ground surface. In one embodiment, the angle of inclination of the third stage may be created by a small back supporting stand, which may support one end of the third stage, with the other side resting substantially on the plane of the ground surface. In one embodiment, the width of the third stage portion of the sluice box may be wider than the second stage width—about seven inches (as opposed to one embodiment's second stage portion of the sluice box having a six-inch width) in one particular embodiment. The third stage may have a relatively long length, providing more opportunity for the targeted desirable mineral particles to be trapped therein. In one embodiment, the length of the third stage may be roughly thirty inches.
The third stage may also, in one embodiment, incorporate riffles designed to trap smaller desirable mineral particles or, in another embodiment, an expanded sheet of metal containing a series of elongated hexagonal-shaped perforations. Under the riffles or metal sheet may be matting for trapping the smaller, finer, and/or lighter desirable mineral particles. In one embodiment, said matting may not have a backing, which may allow for easier removal of the desirable mineral particles trapped therein by rinsing of the matting. To facilitate cleaning and gathering of desirable mineral particles, in one embodiment, an additional stage portion of the sluice box (such as the third stage) may be easily detachable from the prior or second stage portion of the sluice box. The additional stage portions of a sluice box (for embodiments incorporating such additional stages) may also be comprised of lightweight material, such as in one embodiment, light gauge aluminum.
The (at least) three stages and supporting stands (for the applicable embodiments incorporating such additional stages and stands) may also fold easily and compactly, allowing for quicker set up and, once a prospecting session is completed, for quicker clean up and disassembly. As previously mentioned, when folded the apparatus may be a backpack with the hopper in such a position that it may be a storage compartment, with the weight of the apparatus and any equipment/objects carried therein centered and distributed across a miner's back and shoulders, in one embodiment, through the shoulder straps and a portion of the apparatus serving as a backpack frame, which portion in one embodiment may be the large supporting stand.
When the apparatus is in its folded position and carried on a miner's back and shoulders, one side of the hopper may serve as the floor of the backpack compartment, upon or above which floor may be placed or secured objects, such as a pail or bucket, inside which smaller items (such as a snuffer bottle) may be placed. In the high banker embodiment, such objects may also include water delivery hoses, etc. In one embodiment where the hopper has a substantially-box shape, with an open end for rejecting/discharging larger stones, the wall of the hopper opposite from the open end of the hopper (i.e., the receiving end of the hopper) may be essentially, when the apparatus is in its folded position, the floor of the external storage compartment. Folding and utilizing the high banker as a backpack in this manner may leave the prospector's hands free to carry other prospecting items, such as for example a water pump and a standard-sized shovel (which in one embodiment may be a number 2 sized shovel). In addition to unfolding from its folded position in several surprisingly easy and quick steps (as described in more detail below for specific embodiments), in certain embodiments of the apparatus incorporating supporting stands, time is saved by not having to separately attach legs to a placer mining apparatus (where such legs would otherwise be required). Once a prospecting session is complete, the apparatus may allow gathering of captured desirable mineral particles, cleaning up, and re-folding so that it may be carried as a backpack, all in a relatively expeditious and convenient manner.
The above description and listed alternative embodiments are considered that of some embodiments only. It is understood that the embodiments shown in the drawings and described below are merely for illustrative purposes and not intended to limit scope. Alterations and modifications, therefore, and such further applications as would occur to those skilled in the relevant art(s), are also contemplated. For example, the shape of the hopper may vary, and the shape of various other components such as the supporting stands may also vary.
“Desirable mineral particles” are defined herein as those mineral particles for which a miner is searching, such as for example (but not limited to) gold, platinum, silver, etc. “Undesirable mineral particles” are those mineral particles that are not desirable mineral particles. “High banker” is defined herein as a placer mining apparatus comprising a sluice box, but not limited to use in or contiguous to a water source. “Compartment” is defined as a space within which an object may rest or be placed or be secured, and does not necessarily constitute an enclosed space. “Within” is defined as substantially inside, so that an object is considered within a compartment even where not the entire object is inside an enclosed or substantially enclosed space. “Surrounding” is defined as substantially around, or more around than not around, but not necessarily all around. The numerical values described herein are mostly approximations and are not intended to be interpreted strictly or inflexibly.
Turning to the drawings,
As shown in
The second stage 10 and the third stage 11 may both comprise separate portions of a sluice box 18, and may also be comprised of lightweight material such as, in one embodiment, lightweight aluminum. The second stage 10 and the third stage 11 portions of the sluice box 18 may both be relatively narrow in comparison to the width of the hopper 15 (although the third stage 11 in one embodiment, as explained below, may not be as narrow as the second stage 10). The larger supporting stand 12, the smaller supporting stand 13, and the hopper support stand 14, may also be made of lightweight material, such as in one embodiment light gauge aluminum. In one embodiment, the total weight of the three-stage portable high banker 8 may be under or around twenty pounds.
As explained in more detail below, the stages 9, 10, 11 and the supporting stands 12, 13, 14 of the high banker 8 may fold in a compact position for more convenient storage and portability, and as shown in
As shown in
Once a miner 19 has transported the high banker 8 and prospecting equipment 25, 26, 27, 36, 37 to a prospecting location (such as the location shown in
Next, as shown in
The mineral deposit 44 may thus be placed onto the hopper 15 for prospecting purposes, as shown in
The spray bar 17 may be perforated with holes 46 through which water 43 may spray onto the classifier 16 and the mineral deposit 44 placed thereon. The mineral deposit 44 that is rejected may fall to the ground 47 around the bottom side 30 of the large supporting stand 12, which might provide additional support to the stand 12. The mineral deposit 44 that is small enough to pass through the classifier 16 may combine with the water 43 to create slurry 48, which may enter the artificial channel of the second stage 10 portion of the sluice box 18 (as shown in
The second stage portion 10 of the sluice box 18 may be designed to catch the particles of the mineral deposit 44 that are heavier, larger, and/or coarser desirable mineral particles, and also to catch a higher proportion of such particles in comparison to non-desirable particles. Accordingly, as shown in
As shown in
The third stage 11 portion of the sluice box 18 may be designed to capture the desirable mineral particles of the mineral deposit 44 that are smaller, lighter, and/or finer. For example, the velocity of the slurry 48 as it passes through to the third stage 11 may be slowed, due to an angle of inclination that is less steep than the second stage 10. This less steep angle of inclination may be created by the back supporting stand 13, which may elevate the front portion of the third stage 11 a certain height above a ground surface 47 (as shown in
Along the bottom of the third stage 11 portion of the sluice box 18 may also be features designed to capture particles of mineral deposit 44 that are smaller, lighter, and/or finer desirable mineral particles, which in the embodiment described herein may be a metal sheet 53 containing elongated hexagonal-shaped perforations 54. Underneath the third stage metal sheet 53 may be a matting 55, (as shown in
Once a miner 19 is finished prospecting at a particular location, and the desirable mineral particles gathered, the three stages 9, 10, 11 of the high banker 8 may be cleaned and folded relatively quickly and conveniently into the configuration for use as a backpack 20. Similar to the unfolding/set up process, this clean-up/gathering/folding process may in one embodiment be completed without the aid of tools, in part by utilizing manually adjustable means such as bolts and wing nuts 45, 57, 58, 59 (as shown in
To begin cleaning the second stage 10 (
To begin cleaning the third stage 11, the metal sheet 53 and the matting 55 may be removed, as shown in
Once cleaned, the matting 55 and expanded metal sheet of riffles 53 may be re-inserted into the third stage 11 portion of the sluice box 18, and the high banker 8 and the stages thereof 9, 10, 11, along with supporting stands 12, 13, 14, may be folded back up into a backpack configuration 20. The bucket 25 and other equipment such as hoses 27, 40 may be placed in the hopper/backpack compartment 15, resting upon and/or being securely placed above the compartment floor/closed side 22 of the hopper 15 (opposite from the open ended side 60), and with the two hopper sidewalls 23, 24 and classifier 16 surface functioning as three sidewalls 16, 23, 24 of the hopper backpack compartment 15, with the prospecting equipment (e.g., bucket 25, pan 26, hoses 27, 40) being secured in the hopper compartment 15 by straps 61. It is anticipated that the entire clean up and folding up process, once the miner 19 is familiar with the high banker 8 could take about or less than thirty minutes.