Material Dryer * Large Custom Classifier *Custom sizes on The Gold Exorcist Filter System.
NEW LARGER 19x24 DESIGN AVAILABLE!

We can produce any Size Machine from Hobby to Industrial This machine will work with all type of materials including Clay, Rocks, Black Sands ETC. The key to this unit is the material has to be dry so that the Electro-Dynamic Charge can Take Place. Great for Tailings*Placers areas* Black Sands*Wherever Fine Gold is Found..
"The Gold Exorcist", is so good it gets rid of all the Evil Dirt, clay, black sands, and rocks and your left with good OLD' "GOLD".
Questions and Answers
1. What type of material works best with this machine
Answer: The Gold Exorcist will work with any and all dirt's and materials. From pebbles to black sand this machine will work. I have people crushing Rock crushing computers and working gold field, mines, and tailing piles if there is gold there this machine will get it at the best rate of any machine in existence. The key is the material has to be aprox 85% dry. The gold has to be able to separate from the other material. If you able to make the dirt into a ball in your hand and it stay in the ball then the material is too moist. We are making a dryer for that issue. PLEASE ONLY OPEN THE DOOR GATE TO WHATEVER YOUR CLASSIFYING TO. Remember you can not run this machine to fast but you can run the material 2 thick. SO only open the door 1/8 when classifying to 1/8
2. Its it better to run the gold machine slowly.
Answer: No I have yet to find a situation where you should run this machine slowly. Just open the doorway slightly larger than the classification of the material and fill the machine up. The more flow the more dynamic charge developed.
3. Should I take off the slope of the tray to run black sand.
Answer: No black sand is no problem with this machine. I would further state you can even increase the slant and angle of the lower filter system by using a flattened 2 x 4 piece of wood under the back legs by the door. You will get rid of most all the black sand and still retain the gold on the filter.
4. I am having trouble running the red clay in Montana. What should I do.
Answer: Try classifying it to a 30 mesh make sure its dry. Usually you need to classify it to the size of gold expected in the area. Most gold there is very fine. I have people in Las Vegas Classifying it all the way up to a 1/4 inch. There they are getting some nice pickers. My design is really based on 1/8 and smaller. I worry about 1/4 inch since a round piece of gold that big may very well roll off the machine.
5. With this get Flour Gold that is all that is in my area?
Answer: absolutely. Be sure to have some soap in that gold pan if there floating gold in the area it will get it.
6. If there is a piece of gold on the outside of a rock will it still capture it.
Answer: If the quartz or rock is bigger than the piece of gold probably not. If your in that kind of area you will need to crush the rock to 30 to 50 mesh see how that works for you.

CC690 opened to operating position |

Collapsed position with wheels and legs stored inside
for easy transport
|

Collapsed position with wheel assembly
attached for easy portability |
History of the CC690
The
highbanker/power sluice you see in the above pictures is one we
designed based on published research from Yukon placer gold recovery
operations. We wanted a highbanker that could process more material
(from a human standpoint) than other small scale mining equipment
available, and yet still have a high rate of recovery for fine gold. In
addition, I wanted it to be light weight, low cost and heavy duty. As
development progressed, heavy duty won out over light weight and low
cost. I decided that something durable and easy to transport would
add value and more than offset some extra weight and cost.
This
unit folds together for wheeling down to the dig site. It can then be
quickly set up with no tools and no tiny parts to lose. It is powered
with a common 6.5hp, 3 inch trash pump. The water is run through 2 inch
suction hose and 2 inch lay flat hose at 150 gpm.
I
like to be able to inspect my tailings, so the grizzly pivots to allow
the user to dump the large rocks out onto an inspection plate before
they are discarded. The -3/4 inch material that washes through the
grizzly runs over some very aggressive aluminum angle riffles before
dropping down into the bottom trough. The bottom has 2 sizes of expanded
metal riffle sections. They are 3/4 inch and 3/16 inch heavy gauge
aluminum. Top and bottom trough are 4 feet long by 1 foot wide. There is
deep v-groove matting under heavy vinyl miner's moss under all riffle
sections to securely retain any captured gold.
The
development and testing process have taken about 2 years. The first
prototype I built was very basic, but worked far better than I had
expected... and it proved out the research. I have made many
modifications since that time to make the whole thing more user
friendly. So, at last, we have a quality highbanker in production and
available for sale. |
 |
 |
| 5 year old Jeffrey ready to get started. |
Digging some gravel brought up from the creek. |
| |
|
 |
 |
| Shoveling the gravel onto the grizzly. |
Dumping the washed rocks off the grizzly. |
|