Gah I know mate. I'm obviously getting mentally feebler every passing month.you are both correct but Jon you may be missing the 3 year part of the equation - take that 26.01 and divide it by 3 years
Jon you are getting soft in your old age
Gah I know mate. I'm obviously getting mentally feebler every passing month.you are both correct but Jon you may be missing the 3 year part of the equation - take that 26.01 and divide it by 3 years
Jon you are getting soft in your old age
I've got an optometrist's laser in my demo pile. Haven't got around to breaking it down yet, where are the PM's ?Nothing about free or cheap 10 oz a year of gold from electronics is a hobby, it would be flat out luck. I had it happen once. I paid $200 for 2 oz of gold because I got lucky. That luck kept my house out of foreclosure and allowed me to build. But that wasn't even circuit boards, those were industrial yag lasers.
Over a decade of constantly looking for free or cheap gold. I've probably read a good majority of this forum looking for untapped local sources. I've wore the fingers out of countless pairs of leather gloves on computer boards. I've got a titanium screw in my wrist after falling while loading my truck.
The only reason I'm still collecting e-scrap is because I'm scared to quit. I have good relationships with my suppliers, and I know how hard I worked to build them. It pays the bills when other things don't, and life is unpredictable.
Won't be much in a laser that size. These were made to cut and etch metal. However, they will be in the actual laser diode.I've got an optometrist's laser in my demo pile. Haven't got around to breaking it down yet, where are the PM's ?
ThanksWon't be much in a laser that size. These were made to cut and etch metal. However, they will be in the actual laser diode.
The vast majority of the material was gold filled scrap. I'd say about 85% of the total amount of material was gold filled. The other roughly 15% was mainly gold fingers and ceramic processors from circuit boards, and a very small amount was karat gold. For the record, and possible discussion points of how much one can yield per year as a hobbyist, the first year of the 3 years did not yield much (roughly only 40 grams) as I only processed gold fingers and ceramic processors during the first year. The vast majority of the yield was done in the last 2 years of the total 3 years, pretty much when I started processing gold filled material. Keep in mind that although I did try circuit boards, and was not successful, none of the yield presented in my post was from processing whole circuit boards. The amount of time spent disassembling boards outweighed the yield for me, as I couldn't find a steady supply and the supply that I did find was minimal and lacking, so I stuck with gold filled and gold fingers when I can find them. As far as time goes, in the beginning I spent many hours searching for scrap per day, and then it would take a few weeks before I finished processing. Over the last year or so, I spend about 10-20 hrs a week searching for material online, and when I accumulate at least 5lbs worth, it takes about a week to process.I this thread, @icejj. showed his results from 3 years collecting and refining. If this came from scrap he acquired very cheap or free he is approaching the 10 oz per year estimate I gave for a hobby refiner. He said it is 809 grams or 8.67 ounces per year. I would like to get an idea of how much and what type of scrap yielded that beautiful image and how many hours a day or week he works at it.
The goal of this thread is to show by example what can be done by a serious hobby refiner rather than one who collects, disassembles, shreds and ships to a refiner to turn a profit. I realize there are many here who do this for a living but there are likely more who want to dabble in this because they have access to circuitry or other scrap. This is just to show, by example what is possible for a reasonable effort.
The vast majority of the material was gold filled scrap. I'd say about 85% of the total amount of material was gold filled. The other roughly 15% was mainly gold fingers and ceramic processors from circuit boards, and a very small amount was karat gold. For the record, and possible discussion points of how much one can yield per year as a hobbyist, the first year of the 3 years did not yield much (roughly only 40 grams) as I only processed gold fingers and ceramic processors during the first year. The vast majority of the yield was done in the last 2 years of the total 3 years, pretty much when I started processing gold filled material. Keep in mind that although I did try circuit boards, and was not successful, none of the yield presented in my post was from processing whole circuit boards. The amount of time spent disassembling boards outweighed the yield for me, as I couldn't find a steady supply and the supply that I did find was minimal and lacking, so I stuck with gold filled and gold fingers when I can find them. As far as time goes, in the beginning I spent many hours searching for scrap per day, and then it would take a few weeks before I finished processing. Over the last year or so, I spend about 10-20 hrs a week searching for material online, and when I accumulate at least 5lbs worth, it takes about a week to process.
*Edited for spelling and clarity
Wait a minute...while searching for a bga process I found this. It takes 65-70 computer towers to make a ton? Towers...you mean desktop computer towers?That sounds about right (when talking about actual computer towers) once you get "good" at tearing towers down you should be able to tear down right close to a ton in an 8 hour day
On average it takes "about" 65 - 70 towers to make up a ton
When I was doing this for a living both the guy I hired & I could (each) tear down right close to a ton of towers in a day
When I was doing this for a living I had 3 scrap yards I was buying "whole" electronic scrap from by the ton
on average I would pick up 5 - 7 tons per month from "each" scrap yard - then every once in awhile I would get a load from one or two of them that was 10 tons - 15 tons - even 20 tons --- I think the biggest load I ever got was like 25 or 30 tons
When I got some of those bigger loads I would hire another guy - he could only tear down about 3/4 ton in a day
Bottom line here is that in order to make money (as in make a "living") at this you need to process this stuff in HIGH volume
Kurt
Wait a minute...while searching for a bga process I found this. It takes 65-70 computer towers to make a ton? Towers...you mean desktop computer towers?
Funny how they've changed isn't it.I looked at a new computer the other day with an I7 processor, single stick of memory and an SSD hard drive. No cdrom but a single slot for a pen drive. The whole system was in an 8x10 box about 2 1/2 inches thick. Compared to my first tower and monitor that took two people to load in my truck.
I don't have any analysis tool except normal fire assay@Ayham Hafez , what type of lab do you have for your assays, is it a classical fire assay lab, an instrumental analysis like Atomic Absorption or ICP, or is it XRF scans?
As a beginning or alternative solution I think we can count on the color of the molten or slag while smelting isn't it? For example, keep oxygen degassing run till we got red slag and red molten.For smelting, a classic fire assay running a doré bead for total precious metals can tell you what percentage of the smelt anode is precious but to determine the other metals removed by smelting and oxidation an Atomic Absorption is useful for real time monitoring. Excessive base metals remaining in the anode from not bubbling oxygen long enough will shorten the useful life of your electrolyte.
The yield will be somewhat more than that, how much I don't know.Anyone has a record for gold yield in small socket p4 green motherboards? In boardsort they buy it for 2.9 USD per pound, so I wonder what exactly the yield of it.
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