E-waste Zevenbergen
Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2017
- Messages
- 6
I do not know about yields.I got these slot connectors, fully gold plated, they are from vintage HP instruments from the 80's. What yield can i expect from these per kg of just the pins? And will the solder be a problem during refining?
Some of them are marked amphenol, and some are marked CINCH. I think i saw a production date of 1975 on some of them. I think all pins together will weigh around 200 grams, most of them very flat fully plated pins with a high surface area to weight ratio. I will save them for a rainy day to break away all the plasticsAs a rule, Amphenol and other manufacturers coated connectors of this class with a thickness of 20 microinches, which corresponds to 0.5 microns.
the yield of gold per kilogram varies depending on the thickness of the brass pins that were gilded...
At the same time, it is worth understanding that taking into account the number of pins per kilogram or pound of weight, a difference in thickness of even a few microns greatly varies the gold yield depending on the weight of the pins...
Hi, thank you for your reaction, some are amphenol and the rest is CINCH. I have some fully gold plated and gold traced boards from the same equipment, 1975-1980s i think. Even the backsides of most boards are gold plated, just completely covered in solder. I will desolder everything from these boards and save the components, and then dissolve the solder in hcl 35%. After i treat the gold pins from the connectors, can i just throw everything in the same pot and dissolve everything with ar? Or should i treat them separately? And do you recommend trimming the clean gold fingers and save them for later to process in a batch of solder-free material?Do they have "amphenol" anywhere on the casing? They made a lot of these for many brands. If they are genuinely for HP and from the 80s then they do yield well but the issue is that without knowing which particular fitting they were for you can't know. The pins themselves I've seen yield from 2g per Kg to 15g per Kg, but I would suggest that until you've actually got a result you work on the lowest figure. Averaging or guessing won't do any favours.
Take the pins out and wash in hot HCl to get rid of the solder before going to AR.
I got these slot connectors, fully gold plated, they are from vintage HP instruments from the 80's. What yield can i expect from these per kg of just the pins? And will the solder be a problem during refining?
I got these slot connectors, fully gold plated, they are from vintage HP instruments from the 80's.
I have some fully gold plated and gold traced boards from the same equipment, 1975-1980s i think. Even the backsides of most boards are gold plated
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