Escrap Refiners Shopping Cheat Sheet - Rev 0.6
Escrap Refiners Shopping Cheat Sheet - Rev 0.6
Escrap Refiners Shopping Cheat Sheet - Rev 0.6
* Gold extraction values deeply depend on recovery techniques used, etc. One of the most neglected processes are
crashing (milling) of ceramics in ball or hammer mill (stone crusher), and fine grinding of fibre CPUs (can be easily
ground in Blendtec Blender) to get hold of hardly accessible gold in CPU's housing. Fibre CPU's contain so little of
precious metals that these are worthless to refine.
NOTE: CPUs contain not just gold, but silver in the solder / tin, platinum (mostly fibre CPUs), and palladium. These
should be tested for and precipitated if detected in AR solution. MLCCs (chip capacitors & capacitor arrays) on fibre
CPUs and some ceramics contain palladium and silver.
Hybrid IC's come is many shapes and sizes in plastic, ceramic, metal (gold
plated) and epoxy packages. These may contain gold, platinum, palladium band
silver. Any combination of these IC's will yield different results.
Raw weight of gold plated fingers, fully assembled RAM sticks 0.6-0.9 g / 100
sticks. IC's on the RAM modules contain precious metals as well and should be
processed with other plastic IC's such as flatpacks.
RAM Sticks with tin plated fingers will yield precious metals from IC's only.
Gold Plated Pins (CPU Socket Pins, Test Pins, Jumper Pins, Jumpers, Connector Pins, etc.)
There are many types of gold plated pins.
Mostly used are DB connectors, high
frequency antenna connectors, test pins,
jumper pins, thru hole IDE interface
connectors, extension card slots (ISA, PCI,
AGP, PCI-X, PCI-E, RAM module sockets,
etc.). These average between 2-6 g per lb
of pins. Yield values highly depend on
plating processes used, full or partial
plating such as flashing (lowest yield) of
ISA and PCI slots, etc.
SMD LEDs
SMD LEDs yield up to 2,4% Gold by its raw weight (no solder included in the weight). Yield rates
vary depending on LED Manufacturer.
SMD Resistors
SMD resistors & SMD resistor arrays are a nice small source of Silver and Palladium for
patient people!
Note: ALL masses rounded up to next nearest gram , without any heat sinks.
375 assay 9 parts of PM and 15 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 37.5% of PM.
500 assay 12 parts of PM and 12 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 50.0% of PM.
583 assay 14 parts of PM and 10 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 58.3% of PM.
750 assay 18 parts of PM and 6 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 75.0% of PM.
875 assay 21 parts of PM and 3 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 87.5% of PM.
958 assay 23 parts of PM and 1 parts of another metals in the alloy, making it 95.8% of PM.
999 assay 24 parts of PM and 0 parts of another metals, making it pure 99.9% of PM.
Conversion of lower Karat Gold into 24K of Gold (applicable to other precious metals)
1. First we must convert Karat system into metric one, dividing Karat assay of metal alloy by 24, and then
multiply by 1000.
For example, 18K of gold equates into the following: (18/24) x 1000 = 750 metric assay (75% gold
purity) of precious metal.
2. Then we can figure out Troy ounce portion of 24K pure precious metal based on the previous Karat equation:
(Troy ounce portion x metric assay) / 1000 = pure precious metal portion in reference to 1 Troy ounce.
For example, we have 4 Troy ounces of 18K Gold that equals to 750 metric assay. The equation will look
like this: (4 x 750) / 1000 = 3.0 Troy ounces of pure 24K gold.
Then we can further convert Troy ounce portion into grams or standard ounces for our convenience:
Troy ounce portion x 31.1034768 = X grams (i.e. 3 ozt x 31.1034768 = 93.3104304 grams), or
Troy ounce portion x 1.09714 = X ounces (I.e 3 ozt x 1.09714 = 3.29142 ounces).
TO BE CONTINUED ...