It is well known that copper comes from the refiner as electrolytic pure, and that's true even for making pipe, or other copper items that rely on copper being rolled and otherwise formed. Pure copper works well, while contaminated copper does not. To expect to find values in copper used in items made in a production facility is a very, very long shot. Traces that may be found would cost more to recover than their value. Were that not the case, they would have already been removed.Elfs said:Philosophically speaking, If residential wire is 99.98% percent pure. Could there be some gold and silver in the 00.02%. Or any other copper like pipes ect.
What Oz said.Oz said:He is not teasing. We try our best to keep spelling and grammar correct here as there are many that need to use a translating program just to correspond here as English is not their first language. You will notice that the moderators encourage others to correct us if we make a mistake as well.
In addition, with chemistry a mistake or misspelling could result in serious injury or death if someone is trying to follow instruction.
I couldn't agree more---but most likely as parts per billionths.goldsilverpro said:Gold and silver are both byproducts of copper refining and I'm sure that both can be found as trace elements in the purified copper, along with 20 or 30 other elements.
Reno Chris said:As a related concept, most rocks naturally contain ppb trace levels of gold - your average mountain probably has a pound or more. Sea water has traces of gold. The oceans contain tons of gold.
The only problem is that even at $1600 per ounce it will cost you far more to extract it than the value of the metals recovered. So what value is it?
An article I read some time back stated that gold is one of the most wide spread of all of the rare elements, found, virtually, everywhere, but rarely in recoverable concentrations.Reno Chris said:As a related concept, most rocks naturally contain ppb trace levels of gold
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