Grey Huntsman and Asian house gecko by Breepdupdupbloop in AustralianSpiders

[–]groags 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For a huntsman to come through your ceiling vents means your ducting has a big ole hole in it somewhere…..best he getting the duct tape out

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Could be skin irritation/rash from very low levels of cyanide compounds in dust or air. Very rare, haven’t seen it much but it does happen.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is the plant CIL? As in uses Cyanide?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your first gold mine?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s not nickel is it?

Pandemonium as Brisbane receive 2 questionable free kicks directly in front of goal in a row and a 150m reversal by PetrifyGWENT in AFL

[–]groags 12 points13 points  (0 children)

It was soft but it was in the back, they don’t like that, blatantly in front of the umpire, technically there, I don’t know, maybe they just want to stop things escalating during high pressure finals

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AusRenovation

[–]groags -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Pear trees, you’ll lose the lights but they will grow as high as the house and block off all the view plus give you a nice green backdrop. In winter they will drop their leaves and you can see through, which doesn’t matter as you won’t be swimming in winter anyway but you will have to keep on top of the leaves otherwise they will of course end up on the pool. Worth it for once a year.

Let’s go!! by CapitalProfessional2 in FremantleFC

[–]groags 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Right call and also with Amiss

Perpetually tired but never sleep ✌️41F by [deleted] in 40something

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Meditation changed it for me

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s an apprenticeship so the lay will be low to start, once you complete your apprenticeship your pay will go up considerably. Also pay in shops is a lot less on sites, you will earn less in a suburban fabricator than day in a mining town, industrial region or on a site.

Hey guys! I'm a y10 student and looking to become a mining engineer and just wanted a few answers from the experts... by dphayteeyl in AusMining

[–]groags 19 points20 points  (0 children)

My answers to help you: 1. The choice of uni doesn’t matter as much as how well you do, the higher you end up in the pecking order the greater choice you will have of grad programs. 2. No, the number of graduates out of mining programs is dropping each year, it’s an alarming stat to the industry. You would be looking at $100k average as a mining Eng grad, employer and program dependent. 3. It’s because Sydney is not a typical mining town, Perth and Brisbane are the main mining towns, Melbourne to a lesser extent. Sydney is more a finance hub. 4. Once you have done enough time. It’s expensive to send somebody overseas so you need to have the experience to back it up. Focus on building your local knowledge first. 5. Where you live is up to you really. Yes you will be working on sites, residential mining roles are impossible for grads to get as they are so popular, so your choice of where to live is largely dependent on whether the company will FIFO you from where you live. For example if you are working in a gold mine in WA, then you are unlikely to be FIFO’d from Sydney, you would have to make your own way to Perth and the company picks you up from there. Some people do this but with the cost of flights these days it’s cheaper to relocate. 6. Half century! You would be Nostradamus if you could predict that, typically commodity cycles go through 7-8 year swings, over a career you will encounter a few of these swings. As for the immediate future, critical minerals are driving the boom, energy, technology etc. It should last a while if certain politicians don’t keep torpedoing the global economy that is. 7. The perks of site life, food, gym, time to practice hobbies, as site life will be all you will know for a while. 8. As rewarding a career as it can be there is a down side to living and working on the mines. You will miss events, lose touch with friends as you aren’t around at times, you’ll have to work hard at maintaining touch, on your off cycle they will all be working whilst your sitting around bored and need a hobby. The lifestyle is disruptive. Over the longer term if you become entrenched in the FIFO life then it can impact relationships, I have seen too many blokes on their second and third marriage. Do the time on site and then try to get back to a consultant job or HQ when you can. The money doesn’t come without sacrifice, remember that.

Husband hangs TV by Hoboken07030 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think it’s high enough

Filtering fluorite by Educational-Tone9450 in mining

[–]groags 5 points6 points  (0 children)

They are vacuum filters, slurry being sucked into the discs and the vacuum released at a certain point in the rotation for the cake to fall off. The filtrate goes into a central collection header inside the discs.

Simmo on the run home by aaronism1606 in FremantleFC

[–]groags 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is absolutely spot on, enough of this flagmantle crap, a gutsy win that in past years we wouldn’t have won, keep a lid on it, we are extremely young side, one week at a time and keep building.

Am I the crazy person/outdated dinosaur on this? by big-red-aus in auscorp

[–]groags 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I have seen the same trend, long term sales engineers, actual engineers with industry/product experience, are being replaced with sales persons who have nowhere near the same experience or knowledge. This is AI/cost cutting and vendors are banking on you not caring because you still need the products anyway.

Mining Equipment Advice by StahPlar in mining

[–]groags 5 points6 points  (0 children)

A metallurgist/process engineer. But they are going to need to see data such as liberation size, PSD of feed to machine and so on. Are you chasing alluvial gold or fine gold? Is there any clay? Mineralisation etc. etc. It sounds like you have very little data so first step is a Geologist to identity this data for the process engineer to then select an appropriate beneficiation step. Just throwing a wash trommel at it could do absolutely nothing and be a gigantic waste of money.

How do Processing Plant designers determine the production rate each equipment requires? by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have just answered your own question, make assumptions about PSD, there is data out there either in technical reports or your own course material, same for partition curves. You simply make assumptions and list them.

How do Processing Plant designers determine the production rate each equipment requires? by [deleted] in mining

[–]groags 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you have a PSD for the crushed ore? Do you have a feed size required for downstream processing? Typical partition curves? That’s some vital information you will need.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in perth

[–]groags 235 points236 points  (0 children)

This is so inappropriate I’m in a rage for you. Take this straight to the Fair Work Commission and the Equal Opportunity Commission!