Good thinking, the only problem is its not a active mine. They are not production drills creating tailings, its an exploration company doing diamond drilling. Diamond drilling has a hallow bit that extract its core for mineralization definition, that core get long and split in half, one half get send out for analysis, the other is stored for future reference and liability (guarantee the resources)... they don't let these core laying around unattended it get send out every shift.So maybe just sign up to letting them use your access. But then each night sneak over and pan the tailings!?
I am currently working at a mine, 10 years ago when I started they where talking about these new zones coming up the pipe line. Well they took 10 years to materialize and these zone are literally connected to the mine... its crazy how long it takes ... the average mine take between 10 to 20 years to open. Lost of mineralization deposit never become mines.We've had a Canadian company drilling and exploring here for over 10 years. No end in sight.
Prolly so. The part about going armed was the important part.no true for all the stats
Prolly so. The part about going armed was the important part.
I'm glad that it seems to have worked out for you so far.
As far as water tankers, where there is a will, there is a way. Worst case might be a water pump from somewhere down below to the drill rig.
The property looks gorgeous. Congratulation!
All the best,
Peter
Citydude, 26 or 27 degrees is the maximum gradient for most trucks.
The only problem is it's a 27% grade to the area on their property. Can a tandem axle water truck climb a 27% grade?
Citydude, 26 or 27 degrees is the maximum gradient for most trucks.
Thanks for that info. I was wondering what the max was.
They have a very well thought out plan and at this point they will be avoiding those types of grades.
You should make sure you are talking the same units. Citydude asked about 27% grade, redman135 answered with a spec in degrees.
27% grade is 15 degrees.
51% grade is 27 degrees.