Gold from computers???

Shake-N-Bake

Hero Member
Dec 5, 2007
647
1

davest

Silver Member
Nov 5, 2007
3,265
1,273
somewhere between here and there, south of over th
Detector(s) used
titan 3000xd/seahunter mk ll/Ace 250/whites 6000XL Pro
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
there is gold in the computers, and cell phones, and games too. Not much, but if you have about 20 of them, you can start a scrap pile, then you have to buy chemicals to seperate the gold from the circuit boards and the chips, then you have to buy more chemicals to seperate the silver from the gold, the platinum from both, and the other metals along with the slag from all of it.

Check out a site called "goldrefining forum.com", look for a poster name of "lazersteve" follow the links to his site. Trust me, it's not as easy as it seems, and you have to have an understanding of chemistry.

It is a pretty neat hobby, but don't expect to bust a computer open and pull ounces or grams of gold out of it without work.
 

BCR

Jr. Member
Jul 7, 2007
85
0
Ontario Canada
Personally I wouldn't recommend trying to do this at home, I'm speaking from a Canadian perspective so I don't know how it would be viewed down in the USA. Up here if you are caught by the Ministry of The Environment doing that you will find yourself in a heap of trouble, because you are using extremely toxic chemicals to try and leach out a very small amount of gold that is hardly worth the effort.

Just do a google search, there are plenty of scrap yards down in the US who take circuit boards and if I'm not mistaken there are more than a few companies who process circuit boards by the millions who have the proper technology etc to safely recover the precious metals.

:thumbsup:
 

Mike_of_Tenn

Sr. Member
Nov 19, 2008
374
8
White Bluff, TN
Detector(s) used
MineLab X-Terra 70
I remember see'n a show or short little news story on this. Anyways They said it takes about 200 computers to get an ounce of gold I believe..Just thought i'd share that with you guys...

Mike
 

whiteknight38

Jr. Member
Jun 15, 2007
32
0
I'm not sure if that 200 computer figure is accurate.
A good source of info on refining e gold is Gold refining forum.com
A contributor there named lazersteve has some great tutorials on how to do it, and says one pound of fingers yields about 2.5 oz of gold.
I can't say how many computers you need to strip to get one lb, but I'll weigh up what a half dozen gave up shortly, as some kind of bench mark if nobody else here knows.
Refining the stuff with acid, is a pretty complex proposition.
Lots of people do it, however, and many buy their fingers and CPUs off scrappers on ebay.
I just watched an auction of 16 lbs of CPUs sell for 120 bucks. These weren't just the processors, but had a fair bit of waste board attached.
One current auction has a guy trying to sell one lb of CPUs for 50 bucks, with "buy it now," but he's probably dreaming.

ebay is a good option for anyone disinclined to get into home refining.
That's probably what I'll do with my hoard eventually.

I will agree that stripping a computer is hard work.
You wouldn't want to do it for a living, but its not bad to do one or two once in a while, if you're sort of doing something else at the same time, like maybe just watching TV.

Along with the gold, you get a fair weight of cast aluminum, and the hard drive discs can be refined or sold as well for their precious metals.
 

rmptr

Silver Member
Dec 25, 2007
3,274
25
Tierra del Fuego
Detector(s) used
Tesoro.Fisher.Garrett
IMO 200 pc's to get an oz might apply to the newest generation of machines.
Technology has allowed them to flash coat the connectors extremely thin.

The old stuff is where you may have a good chance of making bucks.
Like anything else, you gotta know what you're doing to make money at it.

I've just found a suitcase full of 5 1/4 floppy disks and 3 1/2 mini disks I had stored away with programs on them I thought were important... Ha! Silly me!

And I clearly remember paying $600 for a 160mb hardrive to replace a 20mb I had overloaded.

Got all kinds of connectors and cabling for old systems that just won't be useful any longer.

Ha! Ha! A friend once bid $50 on the computer system in a water company for a large metropolitan city.
No one else bid on it.

We went to help him get it in three pickup trucks.
The computer itself was big as a gas powered Lincoln arc welder. Took a forklift to pick it up!
It was online when we got there. The system tech used a scredriver to lock the drives. 2 x 60meg. HUGE!
All the cabling through a large building, printers, and about 60 green screen terminals came with it.

It wasn't worth it!
Sometimes you get more than you bargain for! ;D

Scrapping is best left for professionals!
 

Illinois Jeff

Full Member
Feb 12, 2006
113
11
Hanover Park Illinois
Detector(s) used
XLT
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Yep theres gold in them, but you need to know how to extrude it. Here in Illinois there are very few places that will take computers and go through the extruding process because it is expensive. There are also laws about computer disposal. There are some pretty hazardous chemical compounds in computers so you really need to know what you are doing. Those few companies that do this have it down to a science and they recycle just about the entire computer right down to the plastic housing the computer is mounted in. If it was that easy, everybody would be doing it.
 

silversaddle1

Jr. Member
Dec 11, 2008
92
6
I have been scrapping computers for eight years now. The money in scrapping computers is not really in the gold componets, those are the cream. If you take the time to do it right, you can make some pretty good cash off these things. Break them down to components.

Power supplies
Printed circuit boards
insulated copper wire (Clip off the connectors)
connectors (Most have gold in them)
processor
memory
and aluminum and steel

Don't bother trying to refine the gold stuff, sell it on e-bay! It will bring more than it's worth most of the time!
 

boogeyman

Gold Member
Jun 6, 2006
5,016
4,397
Out in the hills near wherendaheckarwe
Detector(s) used
WHITES, MINELAB, Garrett
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Fiddled around with recovering the gold off of the fingers of some cards and some old CPUs back when prices were through the roof. I think with the cost of the chemistry etc. You'll make more money selling the parts some place like Craigs list or at the local swap meet. Or building up some towers and sell them as a complete system. Where I'm at I can make 5 times the money selling parts as a whole with NO worries about chemicals.
 

ctjed

Tenderfoot
Dec 31, 2008
9
0
Not worth it for the average gold digger. Don't forget about the lead and arsenic that is also present in electronic components.
 

handy

Full Member
Mar 11, 2008
209
3
nw pa
Detector(s) used
bounty hunter sharp shooter 11
how about sending the boards into cash for gold lol they pay for the shipping with the way they rip people off make them pay for the shipping for nothing :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 

pat1011

Jr. Member
Jun 28, 2008
20
0
Limerick
Detector(s) used
minelab explorer II
just to clear one mistake made by whiteknight.
one pound of close cut gold plated fingers will yield about 4 grams of gold. not 2.5 oz
 

boogeyman

Gold Member
Jun 6, 2006
5,016
4,397
Out in the hills near wherendaheckarwe
Detector(s) used
WHITES, MINELAB, Garrett
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Large size paper cutter, like us old farts had in school! Only finger pain is if you boo boo :o

A friend bought a paper cutter for $3 at the swap meet, then got a throatless sheet metal cutter from Harbor Freight for around $39. He chucked the paper cutter before I could abscound with it darn!
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top