Concentrate Reprocessing

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Definition

Concentrate Reprocessing is a workflow collectors use to processing material in stages so you can separate keepers from waste efficiently. In concentrate reprocessing, the method reduces loss of small pieces and makes comparisons between spots more reliable. It is designed for collectors, not lab work, and it helps you avoid mixing material from different spots. When done well, it improves follow-up decisions and keeps your collection’s story intact. When done poorly, it creates mislabeled finds, wasted return trips, and uncertainty about where a piece actually came from.

Collectors Context

Concentrate Reprocessing is a process-control term: collectors use concentrate reprocessing to reduce losses and make comparisons fair between spots.

Set up concentrate reprocessing so each step has a purpose. If you change screen sizes or pan technique midstream, write it down, because it changes what ends up in the concentrate. Consistency is what lets you tell whether one area truly produces better material.

In concentrate reprocessing, contamination and carryover are common mistakes. Keep buckets, pans, and screens clean between locations so you do not “seed” a new sample with old material. A quick rinse often prevents a false positive.

After concentrate reprocessing, label your concentrates clearly and keep them separate until you finish sorting. If you later find a small keeper, you want to know exactly which run produced it and where that material came from.

Common Confusions

Concentrate Reprocessing vs. one-pass processing A single quick run often leaves valuable small pieces in the discard. Concentrate Reprocessing uses concentrate reprocessing to reduce loss by processing in controlled stages.

Concentrate Reprocessing vs. changing screens midstream Switching screen sizes without noting it changes what you can compare. In concentrate reprocessing, keep the method consistent or document the change.

Concentrate Reprocessing vs. contamination Dirty screens, buckets, or pans can move grains from one spot to another. concentrate reprocessing should include quick cleaning between locations to avoid false positives.

Concentrate Reprocessing vs. unlabelled concentrates A great concentrate is useless if you cannot tie it back to a location and run. concentrate reprocessing needs labels that survive water and dirt.

Further Reading