On the WL for this week is:
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KOR what run it had & so it should as those Co grades where pretty nice , $9 mill MC & has host of other assets like Li , Zn ect.. They do need cash , currently in talks with Mr Wang for a few mill but also possible that it could go to a broker. Going to see how it trades over the week & want to see the two lines being respected before jumping in again.
Other then that i think any spec that has Cobalt , Nickel , Graphite , Zinc , Li , Gold , Copper , Uranium will do well , if they a combination of those then even better especially if they are under $10 mill MC
How to work out grades: This taken from PLS
23m@ 1.82% Li2O from 59m(PLS073)
So let's say they put a drill into the ground , the 23m represents the top layer of the resource they hit & 59 m represents the bottom of that drill , you take 23 from 59 = 36 m thick , the grade of that drill is the 1.82%. As the more drills go on , you can start to map out the resource & get an idea of how big or small it may be. If the other drills where less then 59m then that indicates the resource is thinning out , if it's more then 59m then it's getting bigger. Just replace Li grades with what ever you're looking at as all drills on commodities work the same.
Here is a list of grades on various commodities to make comparisons:
SIR : 3.8% nickel & 1.42 % copper from 4m to 80 m
SYR : 22% TGC Graphite from 50 m to 100 m
PLS : Average 1.28% Li but also hits at 1.8% + 9m to 50 m which is what did the re rate early on, 9m to 100
Gold: AHK on the low end 1.28 g/t AU average 100 m with 10 m widths
HAV ( Bonanza
)... 30.5 metres of
39.3 g/t Au from 63.5 – 94.0 metres
4.0 metres of
35.4 g/t Au from 86.0 – 90.0 metres
Zinc: Some of the biggest players in the world have hit's up to 15% , the lowest grad producers in Canada have around 4%
Hope that helps..
Just came across this article
An Adelaide company has developed a silicon storage device that it claims costs a tenth as much as a lithium ion battery to store the same energy and is eyeing a $10 million public float.
1414 Degrees had its origins in patented CSIRO research and has built a prototype molten silicon storage device which it is testing at its Tonsley Innovation Precinct site south of Adelaide.
Chairman Kevin Moriarty says 1414 Degrees' process can store 500 kilowatt hours of energy in a 70-centimetre cube of molten silicon – about 36 times as much energy as
Tesla's 14KWh Powerwall 2 lithium ion home storage battery in about the same space.
Put another way, he says the company can build a 10MWh storage device for about $700,000. The 714 Tesla Powerwall 2s that would be needed to store the same amount of energy would cost $7 million before volume discounts.
Read more:
http://www.copyright link/news/sili...s-adelaide-firm-20170207-gu7eg7#ixzz4YQRttVxR