You could wash the sand and collect the water which comes off. Or soak the sand in a bowl of water. Then remove the sand. Maybe strain it in an old pair of tights. Then evaporate the water off and you will be left with the salt.
Simply pour the mixture through a sieve.
The water will drain through, while the wax will stay in the sieve.
Alternatively, just scoop the wax out of the water, wax shavings are light enough to float.
u use a centrifudge cuz it is a fast spinning tool use to separate mixtures ...
any1 go to brownridge p.s? pm me James_jung@live.ca
Chuck the mixture into water. The sand will sink, the shavings float.
Separating Salt and Sand Using Solubility Pour the salt and sand mixture into a pan. Add water. ... Heat the water until the salt dissolves. ... Remove the pan from heat and allow it to cool until it's safe to handle. Pour the salt water into a separate container. Now collect the sand.
I'd get a magnet and remove the brass with that.
Add water to the mixture. The sand will sink to the bottom, the wood will float to the top and the salt will dissolve in the water.
i donk know
First drain the water then use the Brazilian nut effect and see if that works.
chips/shavings/what-have-you...of WOOD(GASP!).
We own a Gun range and had this exact same problem. we ended up shoveling the wood chips full of lead pellets into buckets of water, skimming off the wood chips and recovering the lead that way.
Add water, It separate woodchip(float) and sand(down)
Definitely not cedar wood shavings.
2000 lbs of anything makes a ton (feathers, wood shavings, mud etc.)
Pencil Shavings... They are the little curly wood chips you get when you sharpen a pencil.