Please do not try and get PMs out of these museum pieces. If you want to make money just sell them as they are. They will sell for much much more then the resources in it and it's a lot less work.Hi / up until two months ago I had no idea that there was a community of people recovering PM from ewaste - I recently stumbled (Facebook marketplace) my way into acquiring a sizeable collection of vintage computer gear and have come here looking for advice -
Thanks
Sellingwhich side of the counter you are on ?
Hello thanks for the response - I have already worked my way through the more valuable pieces - the remaining pieces - besides some of the Apple stuff are not as desirable as they may seem. Trust me I’ve been weeks digging up sold lists and tracking eBay - i have a decent amount of experience doing that atleast. If it’s appropriate I can post the link to my eBay store (will wait for permission on that ) Most of the remaining items are test equipment and 60$ external floppy drives. And I’ve found through discussion with buyers that a lot of the time these items are being bought from me for PM recovery.Please do not try and get PMs out of these museum pieces. If you want to make money just sell them as they are. They will sell for much much more then the resources in it and it's a lot less work.
If you are able to buy the lot then I am interested in buying
Some of it certainly has been. A couple of old Intel computers, hard drives etc. and some of it I still have yet to sell. The majority of what’s left however is simply test equipment - which doesn’t have as much heat in the market as the computers do. I’m more interested in figuring out how to properly estimate the PM content of the 800lbs of vintage circuit boards -Some of that vintage stuff can bring in good money if sold as is.
It looks collectable.
I suppose I should start a new thread describing exactly what’s going on. lol is there an appropriate place to talk about such a thing ? General discussion perhaps?The guys are right vintage electronics can have much more value to collectors than any precious metals in them and if you want to acquire precious metals then sell that material and buy gold to hold onto.
The for sale section I guessI suppose I should start a new thread describing exactly what’s going on. lol is there an appropriate place to talk about such a thing ? General discussion perhaps?
Its good that you have sorted before putting in the screwdriver. Did you look into the PCB boards itself? I know that the PCB boards with the IC chips with the gold cap and window fetch more then scrap value. I know this because I am actually looking for them myselfSome of it certainly has been. A couple of old Intel computers, hard drives etc. and some of it I still have yet to sell. The majority of what’s left however is simply test equipment - which doesn’t have as much heat in the market as the computers do. I’m more interested in figuring out how to properly estimate the PM content of the 800lbs of vintage circuit boards -
Yes - my head has been buried in my laptop trying to identify ICs and cpus - crystal diodes - etc etc - it’s been a crash course you could say - I have a collection of gold top cpu - it’s been more difficult figuring out which small DIPs also contain PM that are sandwiched between the ceramic bodies and weighing that value against their collectibility - especially because it’s always in flux - shifting I mean.Its good that you have sorted before putting in the screwdriver. Did you look into the PCB boards itself? I know that the PCB boards with the IC chips with the gold cap and window fetch more then scrap value. I know this because I am actually looking for them myself
Unless you have the time to investigate what you have and cherry pick the goodies before selling, along with the knowledge how to process those parts, i would say go for the whole lot sale.I have an offer from someone. To buy the entire lot - I’m just unsure about the price. My gut says it’s too low and my brain says I’d be an ***** to refuse -
Is it purely that you think it should be worth more, or is there more substance to it than that?Yes - my head has been buried in my laptop trying to identify ICs and cpus - crystal diodes - etc etc - it’s been a crash course you could say - I have a collection of gold top cpu - it’s been more difficult figuring out which small DIPs also contain PM that are sandwiched between the ceramic bodies and weighing that value against their collectibility - especially because it’s always in flux - shifting I mean.
I have an offer from someone. To buy the entire lot - I’m just unsure about the price. My gut says it’s too low and my brain says I’d be an ***** to refuse -
I have quite a few of them separated out if you are interested. CheersIts good that you have sorted before putting in the screwdriver. Did you look into the PCB boards itself? I know that the PCB boards with the IC chips with the gold cap and window fetch more then scrap value. I know this because I am actually looking for them myself
it certainly is worth more - that’s why I’m getting the offer from a refiner. He too believes it’s worth atleast double the amount I’m asking or else why would he even bother - my hang up is that it might be worth more than double.Is it purely that you think it should be worth more, or is there more substance to it than that?
Do you know he is not a collector as well?I have quite a few of them separated out if you are interested. Cheers
it certainly is worth more - that’s why I’m getting the offer from a refiner. He too believes it’s worth atleast double the amount I’m asking or else why would he even bother - my hang up is that it might be worth more than double.
Firstly refiners don't necessarily work on doubling their money. That's not a worthwhile assumption to make when valuing this stash. Let's suggest that it's worth 25% more than he is offering you, would that be reasonable given his risk, time, labour and expenses to process?I have quite a few of them separated out if you are interested. Cheers
it certainly is worth more - that’s why I’m getting the offer from a refiner. He too believes it’s worth atleast double the amount I’m asking or else why would he even bother - my hang up is that it might be worth more than double.
I have had great results processing the vintage HP boards as shown in your IMG_8979 in Acid Peroxide (AP). You'll have to research that term.
1) *Please first remove (and perhaps save) all of the components on the boards (there are several ways to do that).
2) Drill one small thru hole near the edge of each board (slightly larger than 1/4 inch diameter)
3) Buy a few feet of 1/4 inch diameter plastic tubing from the hardware store.
4) String 4 or 5 depopulated boards onto the tubing and tie a loose knot at the end.
5) Soak them in a bucket of HCL for a few days to remove the remaining solder.
6) Lift them out a perform a clean water rinse.
7) Then soak them in your AP bucket for a few days to loosen the gold foils. The green solder mask on the underside will dissolve
8) Continue processing (as detailed here by the moderators).
*Never put the entire populated board in AP - you will produce a serious mess (like I did when I started).
I can attest that the more work you do in advance, the cleaner gold drop you will have and with higher purity in the end.
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