Platinum recovery/Spark plugs

WoodsmanOf1

Tenderfoot
Jan 7, 2014
7
1
Kentucky
Detector(s) used
Garrett Ace 250
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I've been doing some research lately on recovering platinum from spark plugs. I was turned onto the idea after watching Nat Geo's "Meltdown" where Diego sold the scrap platinum needles out of old spark plugs for a hefty profit. I'm new to the scrapping business, and this is actually my first post on this site, so I'm really hoping that someone can answer my questions. I just acquired 4 large 5 gallon buckets full of old, unwanted spark plugs from a longtime mechanic. He's been saving them for years and he intended on just dumping the buckets into an old car for added weight at the scrap yard. The spark plugs date back from as early as the late 40's or early 50's (probably only a few dozen really old plugs). The majority of the plugs are newer, with a mixture of some older plugs. Given that I'm new to this, how can I tell if they're worth anything? Especially given the time that it will take to tackle this endeavor. Most of them are oily and greasy, so making heads or tails on what they are made of might be a pretty big proposition. How can I tell if they have platinum or other precious metals inside? Any way to tell from the naked eye? Any thoughts or remarks would be greatly appreciated!
 

be better off to getting the platinum out of catalytic converters
 

I know that there is a lot more platinum in catalytic converters, but they're also much more expensive to buy because people know the value of them.
 

How can you tell if the plugs are made out of platinum vs a standard plug?
 

spark_plug_diagram.jpg

The valuable part of the plug is a small insert around the end of a copper core. Historically, this has been made of gold, platinum or palladium. Telling what is in each plug individually would be difficult.
 

View attachment 926471

The valuable part of the plug is a small insert around the end of a copper core. Historically, this has been made of gold, platinum or palladium. Telling what is in each plug individually would be difficult.

So, I would basically have to cut them all apart and have them sent to a refinery? What happens if it's smelted down and it has a mixture of platinum and other precious metals? I think I'm going to try the same method that I saw Diego use when tearing them apart. It will be a tedious task, but I think that I'm up for it. I'm hoping that a dremel and a vice will be enough to get the needle out of the case. Is that all that I should try to recover? Thanks for the input guys. It's greatly appreciated.
 

So, it should yield some money if I have them sent to a refinery? How much will be the question!
 

Plugs today are also made of iridium. Is it worth much? How can you tell the difference from platinum? Just asking...
 

Plugs today are also made of iridium. Is it worth much? How can you tell the difference from platinum? Just asking...

I'm curious about it too. Iridium is also worth money. The stockpile that I have should yield both, but we'll see. I literally have hundreds on top of hundreds of spark plugs. From the research that I have done, I don't see any way to tell the difference. I'm just curious as to what happens once my plugs are smelted. I mean, do they somehow seperate the difference in money between iridium and platinum? It will be a mixture of different things once it's smelted. Just curious how that works.
 

Consider a rotary cutoff tool. Cut the tip flush with the "body"-ceramic and all over a plastic box. Should be quick. Do 50 every sitting. Once you have a few ounces of the cuttings-process it like an ore-or take it to a refiner and get an assay of the cuttings.
If the materials had a lower melt temp I'd suggest meting it into a button for assay.
 

Very few sparkplugs out of the billions made are "platinum plugs" Some are silver, fairly uncommon, most are copper. The platinum ones are usually used in the more exotic high performance cars. They are fairly modern, the first ones I saw were in the early 1980s. The only way to tell is to get the manufacturer's code lists and read the numbers on the plugs. All plugs have the numbers on them and those numbers tell what the tip is made of. I think Bosch is the leading manufacturer of platinum plugs. I doubt if you'll find many if any platinum plugs made by A/C or Champion, and definitely not any older ones by these companies. I worked for Porsche since 1968 and do know about the platinum plugs. I agree with the others that cat converters are the main automotive source of platinum, and I think that identifying and recovering platinum from plugs will not be a very profitable venture. Modern Cats use less platinum than the older ones and the value as scrap is dropping as they use less.
 

Consider a rotary cutoff tool. Cut the tip flush with the "body"-ceramic and all over a plastic box. Should be quick. Do 50 every sitting. Once you have a few ounces of the cuttings-process it like an ore-or take it to a refiner and get an assay of the cuttings.
If the materials had a lower melt temp I'd suggest meting it into a button for assay.

If you just smash the ceramic part of a sparkplug with a hammer the central electrode just falls out, no need to bother cutting the whole plug bottom off flush with the ceramic.
 

Just a thought for concentrating the possible tips that could hold the PMs
 

Hope it works for the OP .'

I saw one episode of "scrappers" where the guy bought the air plane engine for the gold inside & if I recall right
he paid around $6,000 for the engine then after much work he made around half his money back out of the gold
but his small profit IMO (after all the work,ie cutting w/torch soaking in the acid etc, and i'm pretty sure that guy doing the work was not doing it for free) was in the other metals in the engine ,copper ,brass & steel mostly.
Just seemed like a lot of work for a small profit & that,s when gold was trading around $1.700 an ounce.

Good luck in your endeavor .

p.s. We all need one of those handheld Analyzers to see what metals are in an object.

Davers
 

Consider a rotary cutoff tool. Cut the tip flush with the "body"-ceramic and all over a plastic box. Should be quick. Do 50 every sitting. Once you have a few ounces of the cuttings-process it like an ore-or take it to a refiner and get an assay of the cuttings.
If the materials had a lower melt temp I'd suggest meting it into a button for assay.

I basically do that for myself,and though my specialty is different(I have 2:experimental nuclear physics degree and 3 years of experience being a professional EOD specialist in Russia)-but I am quite an experienced chemist!I should say that now I mostly need iridium metal for my own purposes-so I have to deal with spark plugs..And what I also have to say is that as I extracted first some of tips by using aqua regia and started melting them with HHO torch-I found out that it doesn't coalesce,covers in white and smells very strange-as osmium tetraoxide!And it turned out that all the iridium tips contain just 90% of iridium metal and the rest is either rhenium or osmium!And as I also extracted platinum already not for myself but for simple profit-I did dissolve everything except the tip in nitric acid(I mean cutoffs),and after that the tips went to aqua regia-so I noticed that as well as with iridium plugs these were also 90%-but this time I got the rest as an undissolved powder which was iridium metal..So,for me obviously the toughest part was purifying iridium metal because it was obviously only possible to do by inquartation and the metal added was,unsurprisingly,platinum metal-so I had to do only one gram at a time(as it required each time to inquart 9 grams of platinum to each gram of it)-but finally I got around 20 grams of pure iridium metal from 1000 iridium spark plugs.Also the platinum metal turned out to be in larger quantity present there so,I got a nice cute 30 grams of platinum in addition to what I acquired from cats-so in fact it was profitable for me,as I have done all that in around one week-and also I should say that I didn't pay anything for plugs and only around $60 Canadian for chemicals-so it's just around a thousand Canadian dollars of profit per week just only for platinum!

Yep,and BTW I also can offer 50 dollars per gram of iridium tips(without any junk I mean,or anyway 50 bucks for gram of tips after I will process them:it's about 50-60 plugs)-so if someone can-I will be more than pleased to buy them from you!
 

Ive never hear people doing that
 

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