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Based on my experience with another compny's spinoff, the shares would, eventually, arrive in the buyer's account. Although the date of record is the 31st, the ex-dividend date for this type of thing is whenever the company wants it to be. In this case, the distribution date. What happened in my earlier case is the shares came into my account for a day or so (but restricted), and then left. My broker had to figure out where to "send" them.
My guess is that AGE will be handled the same way.
Dino
In the interest of full disclosure, Belgie, that's a gold tone decoder ring.
Dino
Settlement is only 2 days now, so it would be the 27th. That should be posted as the ex-dividend date.
Dino
Thought you said he's in Virginia City. Make up your mind, will ya.
Dino
Yes, I'm actually in Dayton RV Park right now. Heading back to Virginia City after breakfast. I don't like oysters, so that wouldn't be my favorite restaurant. Stopped at the Firehouse BBQ for lunch. Does the Washoe Club has a good menu other than oysters? If you recommend it, I might go there for lunch today.
You avoided my question. Why do you think Paul Thompson, Sr., is in Virginia City?
Dino
What makes you think he's in Virginia City? I haven't seen him here.
Dino
I'm surprised. You woke her up at 6 o'clock in the morning?
Dino
I did call her. At 3:40 PDT yesterday afternoon. Paul has not sold any stock to raise cash for the 10K - or any other purpose. She was as curious as I was. She doesn't have any idea who sold that stock, but she knows that it wasn't Paul.
Dino
Don't breath too deep, though. There's cyanide in the water.
Dino
Boo! Hisssss.
I've probably eaten worse. A lesson my brother taught me when he lived in Thailand: Don't ask your host what is is until after you've eaten it.
Dino
I found that hyaluronic acid, better known as HA, is someone effective in a similar manner. When injected into horses' hocks it appears miraculous. As a powdered supplement, it seems to help delay the deterioration of the joints. There are liquid forms sold also, but harder to find. I give my horse 1500 mg daily and me 1500 mg morning and evening.
I figured the horse can't read the AMA's denial of effectiveness, so I take her "word" for it that it works while I wait for West's team.
Dino
Yes, There is "easy (and CHEAP) to mine gold sitting around for a decade." The reason it hasn't been done before is that it took the Geology department at the university to figure out the way to process the ore economically. Since there are actually piles of ore sitting around, it's pretty obvious that other people have tried...and failed.
Sometimes it pays to have smart friends.
Dino
Vat Agitation Technique?
(I used to work on Madison Avenue.)
Dino
Actually, if you go to Elena, you will see several of those pieces of equipment in use. I saw them there in December.
You really should go see for yourself.
Dino
"-Piercing Power. It can pierce though cloud cover, living tissue, and other solid materials undisturbed
(I guess this means that it would not harm living tissue or solid materials)?"
It would depend on the power of the beam. IOW, don't stick your cat - or your head - in the microwave oven. It's the same form of radiation, but collimated instead of point source radiation. (Yes, despite the engineer's efforts, there are hot spots in your microwave oven.) All of the energy is traveling in a straight line rather than spreading out in a circle. I wouldn't want to be in the path.
Both devices send concentrated energy downfield. If the frequency resonates with the "obstruction", it transfers a lot more energy to it. Microwave ovens use a frequency designed to resonate with the water molecules in food. You are primarily "steaming" whatever you are cooking. Some energy (heat) is transferred to other molecules, which is why you don't use metal containers. Most substances allow most of the radiation to pass, which is why your cell phone works when you are indoors.
As the frequency increases (the wavelength shortens) it has more and more trouble passing through the "obstruction" and transfers more energy. Visible light waves are pretty short. Glass, yes. Sand, no.
Dino
A MASER collimates RF energy in a similar manor to a LASER. Narrow beam, little loss over distance.
Dino
You could just use a MASER to get a tight beam. That wouldn't give you the shorter wavelength, however.
Dino
Try looking here:
http://mexusgoldus.com/media-gallery/photos/ures/
Dino
Here's the link, Perkin.
https://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=77072520&symbol=BTX
Dino
$26,841 in five days?
Sure I wish it were more, but that's a lot more than I made last week.
Dino
Don's record in junior gold miner stock investing is not perfect. He's never, to my knowledge, claimed that. He has even mentioned some "failures" in the past. Since they were several years ago, those posts may not have been on this board. I suspect that, like most of us, he's happy with his successes and doesn't dwell on the ones that didn't work out.
His "skill" is knowing when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em. (Sorry Kenny.)
Dino
"All data gettin kinda 6 years old so MUST be held suspect in a 200 million to 150 million year old Jurassic mega shear trend ."
Gold does disappear over time. At least it did at the Trinidad.
Dino
Way to go, Cesar!
Dino
DANG it! I gotta update my scorecard. I'm falling behind.
Dino
Lets see. Four men to load/unload, diesel to run the loaders and generator equipment for that period, cyanide and other chemicals required, all easily computed quantities. PT knows the ratings of the electrical equipment, the hourly wages, etc. That number is not an AIIC (Is that the acronym? All In Inclusive Cost) since it doesn't include maintenance of the heavy equipment, management, doesn't include benefits, etc., but it's probably close to the weekly cash flow of operation divided by the expected number of ounces produced during that week.
The 76% yield is the conservative value for cyanide leaching. The usual estimate is 50% to start, tuning to at least 76% and aiming for the high 90s.
Dino
Sorry, Jim. I didn't copy it. It was a post from 8 explaining what is going on so, of course, it was deleted.
Dino
Then go hire one.
Dino
Read post 23279.
Dino
My guess - and it's little more than a guess - is that the next test will increase the recovered amount, but still won't be very big. Each run will get better as they flush the salt out of the system. I'm not holding my breath, but I'm not discouraged either. I expect steadily increasing yields, but no more public reports until achieving near optimum.
Dino
The D6 bulldozer has been at Elena for a long time. Marco has a heavy hauler trailer. So I agree, the cost should be very small and the time should be short. The D6 is in Mexico so no border crossing necessary. Truck and trailer available, so the only hitch might be an oversize load permit. The dozer didn't look big enough to need one, but I could be wrong. Just don't move it at night on those crazy 2/3 lane roads.
Oh yeah, I almost forgot the road grader I saw there.
Dino
Different ore composition dictates which process is "best". We're using the Merrill Crowe system, not the one you found. My understanding it this is one of the cheapest ways to process the ore.
Here's a link to a brief explanation: https://www.911metallurgist.com/blog/merrill-crowe-process-equipment
The most recent discussion referred to clarification as in: https://www.911metallurgist.com/blog/operate-a-merrill-crowe-precipitation-process
Hope this answers your question.
Dino
What do you suppose caused the number of outstanding shares to increase? Look at the number of shares in that table. I'd venture that many, if not most, are restricted shares, which do not increase the price per share. They do, however keep the company in business long enough to become profitable.
Dino
Have you ever sold a block of stock?
It can take several days to sell a large block without causing a major effect on the share price. If he had just placed a sell at market for 350,000 shares, that would have cratered the PPS. Since he placed one order - sell a block of shares - the sale isn't over until it's over. (My apologies to Yogi.) The block trading desk handles it. They usually try for a cross - a single buyer purchasing the block that doesn't even show on the tape. You get one confirmation slip. I'm surprised they even showed him the pieces of the sale. They must have changed those rules.
He reported, what to him was one trade, when he was notified of the sale.
Dino
Assuming that he was told on Friday that the final trade in the block transaction occurred on Thursday the 18th, he was either on time or possibly a day late. Not too shabby for someone who was actually in Mexico at the time.
Dino
Make that 3 more. I was there in December.
Dino
Sorry. No 1000 foot panoramas. The drones are limited to 200 meters. Good optics, though. 14 Megapixels, as I recall.
Dino
Then you didn't look very well.
When I was there before Christmas, I saw four filters running, three kilns a firing, two Merrill Crowes, and a leach pad filling a pregnant pond.
In addition, several loaders, dump trucks and various and sundry pieces of mining equipment in use. Oh yeah, a functioning laboratory to keep everything tuned up properly.
Better go back and take another look.
Dino
I strongly recommend the filet. I tried the NY strip steak and it wasn't nearly as good.
Dino