AlluvialRic said:A couple of things I can see and foresee with this.
It is a suction device and by all descriptions is a dredge as it uses a separate pump which sucks water and gravel into a storage device and would be illegal to use anywhere in Australia. You can not even use an eductor dredge in Australia which is one that relies solely on water suction power via gravity siphoning so I can't see this being legal!
Those pumps, even the good quality Jabsco and similar will not take any solids or sand thru them for long
Has anyone yet seen how much gold actually made it up that long pick up and into the PVC catch tube? Unless you are able to pump more than the volume of water which is in that hose on each stroke so that the wash is moved from the riverbed to the catch device in one continuous movement the weight of the gold will have it fall back down and out the hose.
Cheers Ric
dredges were banned because they were disturbing aquafauna by dumping their sluice tailings straight back in to the river
The crevicing pump above fills a container which you then take up to the riverbank and pan or sluice away from the waters edge
No turbidity is created
There is nowhere i have seen a law that excludes their use in NSW but i dont have information on the laws in other states
did you check out his photo that shows how clean the rocks are after he finished ?
If the device was called an " Acme portable dredge " i would be concerned , but the fact its called a "crevicing pump" does give some distinction between the two dont you think ?