Unendeckte Perle
Heute habe ich ihnen geschrieben, ich werde mich selbst drum kümmern.
Zur Not bei der Aufsichtsbehörde.Warte noch ab bis die wieder die emails lesen und ich eine Antwort bekomme.Ansonsten frage ich bei der Behörde nach.
was geht ab bei bayhorse?
Bin zwar nicht mehr investiert, aber es interessiert mich trotzdem.
Habe ich das weiter oben richtig gelesen und verstanden, dass eine Ratingagentur unterstellt, Bayhorse sei ein potemkisches Dorf, also vorne hui und hinten pfui?
Derzeit bin ich auf der Suche nach stichaltigen Infos, habe aber bisher nix gefunden!
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Überlege mir jetzt einzusteigen, wenn es so weitergeht werden die bald ordentlich Geld verdienen.
Q&A: Bayhorse Silver Maiden Resource Estimate
September 26, 2018 JayCurrie
Canada gold, junior mining companies
Bayhorse Silver put out its maiden 43-101 compliant resource estimate on September 24, 2018. We had questions and Graeme O’Neill, CEO of Bayhorse (V.BHS) was kind enough to have answers:
Bayhorse reported a 6 million ounce 43-101 compliant inferred Why not measured and indicated?
With respect to the Bayhorse Mine, we built the mine first, based upon the extraordinary amount of solid geological data we obtained, paid for by someone else I might add. Then, using that additional data we developed during building the mine, we established the inferred resource.
Taking an inferred resource to a reserve would cost us an enormous amount of money.
We have built the Bayhorse Silver Mine and developed the resource for just on US$5,000,000. Peanuts compared to many other mines. Not only that, but we have state of the art processing facilities at the mine
We are in the middle of a silver jewellery box, where the previous operators drilled out and defined 26,000 tons of high-grade silver. Based upon our anticipated daily mining rate of 100 ton/day, that is close to one year’s mining available to us at right at our fingertips. The old-timers rarely had more than a year of blocked out ore ready for mining ahead, and during that year of mining, they replenished it so they always had that year of operations ahead of them. So do we need to develop ten years of ore ahead at a huge upfront cost? Or should we keep developing a year of ore ahead of us at a minor cost? We are practical people and we don’t spend money we don’t have to.
I am sure everyone knows about the Pareto Principle. It says that 80% of results come from 20% of effort, or expenditures. It is true for pretty much everything. Typically, a company raises money to explore, finds mineralization, explores some more, drills and drills and drills, and comes up with a resource, which it takes to a measured and indicated reserve and then does a PEA and then a full feasibility study. Then, once financing is secured, after spending a substantial amount more money, and lots more time, they permit and build the mine. Then, a year after they open the mine, they probably start to generate revenue.
We did it backwards. Built the mine, with a brand new 900-foot haulage way, a 100 ton a day, state of the art upgrading facility, and then we established the resource, and are already mining: all for $5 million. It would cost another minimum $5 million to bring the resource to measured and indicated reserve status. We would rather spend that money mining, upgrading, and getting cash flow. There is still a lot of work to do, such as getting ready for winter, but we are well advanced at that, so we have no disruptions during the winter months.
Everyone wants a guarantee. What we guarantee our shareholders and investors is that we are doing what we said we were going to do, and delivering on it. Maybe late, but delivered nonetheless. But proper funding is required to get anything done.
Does Bayhorse have a processor available to ship material to?
We do, and we have indicative proposals to sell any concentrate we make to smelters, with proposed payment at the mine gate when picked up. But we are constantly looking to improve our bottom line. For example, using flotation, typical recovery is 90%, and our testing has shown that we will get the typical flotation recovery. Then the smelter will pay us 90% of the spot price of silver for the concentrate. Deductions after deductions. That reduces the bottom line. In the event we build a Total Metals Recovery processing facility as proposed by Metals US, we will get pure silver, and eliminate sending concentrate to smelters and refiners, and the attendant costs of shipping to the smelter and refinery.
At this point what does Bayhorse have to do to begin mining out its 1000 ton block?
We are right now increasing an existing 30-foot raise installed in1984 into the first mining block, from 7 x 7 dimension to 10 x 10, and timbering it to meet MSHA safety requirements. This raise is in high grade mineralization and into the mining block. We expect this to be completed in the next two weeks. Then we start dropping the mined material down this raise and we will be upgrading it straight away
What are your plans to extend the resource?
Apex Geoscience is drafting up a drilling program so we can bring the conceptual exploration target into a resource category. A number of 200-foot holes from inside the workings extending outside the known mineralized envelope. There is sufficient geological data to believe the zone dips to the south and to depth. The old-timers mined used hand steel, not today’s pneumatic drills, very labour intensive, to open the workings up. They were very experienced and would not have done it if they didn’t believe something was there.
Once you begin mining what is your estimated throughput per day? Can that be increased?
We are set up to do 100 tons/day, 300 days a year. We built the haulage way for a 200/ton a day operation, and our miners are confident we can achieve that throughput. We want to make sure we have consistent throughput though, so we will gradually ramp up to it
You are using a “Conceptual mining and processing costs were estimated at $US100 per ton of mineralized material” and an “average grade of 21.65 troy ounces per ton (opt) silver (Ag)”. If I divide 100 by 21.65 I get a cost per ounce of $4.60. Is that roughly correct and what does it say about the profitability of the Bayhorse Mine?
We have a substantial amount of cost data developed during this past year. Mining costs, maintenance costs, upgrading costs, however, it is only after operating for a year that we can say with certainty what the actual costs are. Of course, we have a good handle on the mining costs, that are under $50/ton, but again, taking out large blocks is a little different from driving a haulage way, and we have to support a much larger back.
For reference though, the average all-in sustaining costs (AISC) for primary silver mine is around US$10.25 per ounce. That should be used as a rough rule of thumb until accurate numbers are developed after the first year of operations.
https://www.youtube.com/...-psAJmwY&list=UU_-PVaMqBdID4BXeY0cq_gg
Happy Thanksgiving
It has been six months since silver dropped from its last high of US$17.25 to as low as US$13.93 a little over a week ago, and it has been a trying time for silver investors, and particularly Bayhorse shareholders, as we have watched our share price sink to abysmal lows in sync with silver.
We cannot do much about the price of silver, but we can, and are, doing something by progressing with our high grade Bayhorse Silver Mine.
With the news release today, following up our high grade metallurgical sample release last week with BHS2018-24, we have made another significant step towards getting revenue from the high grade silver we are currently mining and processing..
Right now we have built the mine, but just as a truck off the assembly line has to have the gas tank filled up before it can go to work, so we need to fill the Bayhorse gas tank so we can finish the job of getting our silver to market and putting cash in the bank.
We all know the adage, hold your nose and buy when things look like they are going into the dumpster, and sell when everyone is scrambling to buy. In our opinion, this is the time to back up the truck and start loading up. The silver/gold ratio is at extremes not seen for 25 years and Bayhorse is perfectly poised to run with the silver price bulls when it corrects back towards the norm.
Late last year we entered into a Letter of Intent with Mineral Solutions (Minerals) of Coeur d’ Alene Idaho. Some investors/shareholders may know that one of the principals of Minerals, Mike Irish, installed the silver recovery circuit at the Sunshine Mine in Idaho’s silver Valley. What he knows about metallurgy and especially silver can fill volumes. Rick Hurt of Liberty Refiners has a specialty refining operation and is one of the few refiners who can do 5 x nines fine gold, that is used in medical applications, and also supplies the Sunshine Mint, as well as the Canadian Mint. Together they are able to take our direct ship material and not only recover the silver in 4 x nine’s fine, but also the copper, in the form of copper sulphate, that commands a premium to ingot copper.
The 20lb sample we shipped Minerals this week contains between 56 - 58 grams of silver and 2 lbs of copper. We expect to get results shortly, at which time we will tell you.
There are good economic arguments for producing a Direct Shipping Grade, rather than going the extra steps such as flotation to increase the grade further.
It is solely a subject of math. With Flotation, typically 10% is unable to be recovered in the float process and it goes into the tails. So not only do we lose that 10%, but we now have to deal with disposing of the, even though slightly, contaminated tails. A costly undertaking.
So many of the smelters are overseas these days, many in China, shipping material to them is costly, they are set up for specific applications, and the deductions are many, so it is incumbent upon us to get the best bang for the buck we can, both for the Company and its shareholders.
We have been held up this year, and that has frustrated our shareholders, and us, mainly through lack of adequate financing, brought about by low silver prices. We know our cash costs from over two years of underground mining operations.
They are surprisingly low. Under $50/ton. We know our upgrading costs, also low, due to the technology we are using. We are upgrading the mined mineralization ready to ship. We have a refinery to turn it into refined silver. This is happening, no longer tomorrow, but in the right here and now, We know low silver prices will recover.
Graeme O'Neill
CEO
Bayhorse Silver Inc
doch meine vorher etwas preiswerter erworbenen Stücke halte ich natürlich weiterhin durch.
Für weitere Nach-Käufe erscheinen mir BayHorse Silver aber momentan doch etwas zu teuer ...
Die TSX Venture Exchange hat den Antrag von Bayhorse Silver Inc. auf Ausgabe von 1.426.750 Aktien zu einem Preis von acht Cent pro Aktie zur Begleichung der ausstehenden Schulden in Höhe von 114.140 USD angenommen.
Sollte dieser Umstand den Kurs so sehr beflügelt haben?
SILBER Schaut sehr gut aus... Verdoppler oder Verdreifacher in den maechaten Wochen ist hier moeglich
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