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  1. #101
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    Well, I did say, " almost 3" long".



  2. #102
    bigburtchino started this thread.
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    Flinthills - Your correct I'm splitting hairs and you did say "Almost 3" long". The difference in 1/4" (.25) and military standards for capacitors case length dimensions have a +/- tolerance of 1/16" (.062).


    So your capacitors are M39006/01-3054
    M39006: Military Basic Document - for wet tantalum capacitors.
    /01: Data Specific Number - case style CLR25

  3. #103
    bigburtchino started this thread.
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    Here are three cutaway drawings of Tantalum Capacitors: A Tantalum SMD capacitors, Tantalum wet axial silver cased capacitor and a Tantalum wet axial tantalum case. Might help in demonstrating the different materials used in making tantalum type capacitors. Note these are three different types of tantalum capacitors from three different references, tantalum capacitors are made by many different methods and companies.


    Tantalum SMD Capacitor (science Direct)


    Tantalum axial wet silver case capacitor (Basic electricity & electronics)


    Tantalum axial wet tantalum case capacitor (KEMET corp.)

  4. #104
    bigburtchino started this thread.
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    I have not been able to find a verifiable reference (yet) as to the case material for the Sprague axial wet capacitors (M39003/01) CLR25. The fifth line is the date code 8337c (1983 - 37 week), so these are 32 years old. In your pictures, I can see a few date codes on other devices, like the TO3 transistor has a date code of 8348, so board was made 1983 or early 84. I do know they are no longer in production. Military/NASA no longer maintains spec library on these either, stopped using these type 1992/93.

    With only a educated guess, I would say they are probably silver cased, as all early wet tantalum capacitors used silver cases. A M39006/01 is the first wet capacitor specs for wet TC's. I'll keep looking for info, as I want to know. Do you have silver/gold test acids? That would be a 100% way to verify silver case!
    Last edited by bigburtchino; 01-01-2016 at 04:06 PM.

  5. #105
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    If they are silver cased wet tantalum capacitors. Then 30 to 40% of the weight of capacitor is going to be silver. Add the silver and the tantalum scrap value up, you could have some good returns especially if you have a few of these puppies!

  6. #106
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    transister

    hey Mr Big...i just found a transiter similar to the one called Q1...it is from a 20 year old hand held scanner...it is marked motorola 2n176/2-40...it is al gold colored...board says lundell 4610 on back...i found stuff on google but no pictures...i respect your knowledge..thanks
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  7. #107
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    i also found some of these that had flat gold teeth but these are vertical teeth...could they be gold?...in your opion that is...a few of these boards had tha ag/ta caps on them....i know i owe you a favor....thanks

  8. #108
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    Yes those are gold plated "teeth" and four transistors with gold plating...
    ~You have to start somewhere to get anywhere~

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  10. #109
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    thanks...you can see through the board...the back is plain except for silver tracing lines..its gotta be an old board

  11. #110
    bigburtchino started this thread.
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    guss4113 - First off thank you for the compliment, I learned a long time ago that respect is earned and not granted, so thanks again. I was lucky in that my grandfather owned a small radio/tv repair shop in Los Angeles in the 50's and 60's. I started studying electronics in the 60's and 70's. My chosen specialty was Avionics (electronics as it is related to the Aviation/Aerospace industry). I spent six years in the Navy (late 70's and early 80's) as a Flight Engineer and telemeter/sensor development Engineer at Naval Weapons Development Command Point Mugu Calif. I was hired by Continental Airlines directly out of the Navy. It was at Continental I learned and utilized my electronic background the most. I started my own Construction & Landscape Company while still with the airline. So I spent over 20 years in electronic and I have been out of the field for another 20 years.

    I can honestly say I have learned more and enjoyed myself more trying to learn how to correctly reduce waste (commercially generated waste). That is going to be my last working effort and I think it means more (to me anyway) than all that crap above that has a value of $0.25 to me now (I did get a good retirement). I resent the corporate greed that grew into the worlds largest airline with the Continental/United merger. Greed that made already very wealthy men, more wealthy using employee pension plans to fund a airline "that's to big to fail".

    Now lets talk about your gold. How did you determine this circuit board is 20 years old? As just looking at it I think maybe a 70's circuit board. I based that on the material the board is made from, I see no printing, the type of resistors/capacitors and the hand soldered traces on back of circuit board. There are only the four discrete devices, the one TO-3 Motorola 2n176 power transistor and three TO can type packages. The TO-3 in your picture 2N176 is the transistor type, the 2-40 is the date code. I'm not 100% sure, but think that is 1972 40th week (October 1972) still looking on that. TO is the industries designator code for a "package" type, stands for Transistor Outline. There are many TO package devices (TO-1, TO-3, TO-5, TO-18, TO-72, TO-92, TO-220, TO-247 etc.) these are discrete device. Not all TO package devices are transistor either, they use TO packages for diodes and other IC devices, with pin configurations of (2, 3, 4, 8, 10 and 12).

    Motorola started researching and development of transistors one year after Bell Labs announced the first laboratory transistor in 1947. Motorola released the first commercial production transistor in 1956. That first production transistor was the 2n176 a germanium power transistor and by early 1957 Motorola was making more than half of all transistors made! Motorola made the first TO-3 transistor. As far as gold content, hard to say about percentage of gold content without determining age of circuit board, and type of devices, more important as far as I'm concerned, it's the intended use, application and environmental needs. You can't really say those three little can packages have gold plated pins, from that "aerial" photo. I can't even say what type of TO package for certain (TO1, TO5, TO18, and TO72 are very similar in size). They can be verified by examining the "pin out" and TO1's have no tab. The can diameter and height can be also measured to help determine TO types. They build electronic devices by grade classifications and circuit requirements and part numbers have similarities, other companies obtain licensed to build devices with same part numbers or build their own similar device with a lot of suitable substitutes available.

    Electronic devices are built similar to cars, in that there is different model types. Just as cars have model differences so do electronic devices. There is a basic production model, a high end model and maybe two models in between high and low models. What's more valuable a 67 Camaro sport coup or a 67 SS Camaro? Would you try to determine those two cars by just a "aerial" photo? You could maybe determine they are both old and nice to have cars, but not true value.

    You have a pre 1985 circuit board with low population that has more gold content then a low density circuit board made after 1994. The devices may have gold applications on the inside of device, so if there's no visual gold plating on outside, doesn't indicate there's no use of gold. Outside gold plating is a good indication of a higher gold content!


    This is a TO-3 Motorola transistor used in the 70's and 80's. They are much more expensive than a smaller plastic TO-220 transistor that by the 90's was used to save on production cost. TO-3 transistors are still used because they have a cooling advantage. There's more TO-220 with a aluminum heat sink attached used today.


    This is a circuit board used in late 70's (Bose 901 equalizer). Almost same type of circuit board as yours, same style resistors too! The transistors are plastic with gold pins, much cheaper than a TO metal can package.


    This is a military grade circuit board (made 1972 to 1973) with eight TO-72 dual emitter transistors (3N93 and 3n95) four gold plated leads (notice the gold tab). Just to keep this thread going about tantalum capacitors. C1 is a tantalum capacitor (solid tantalum cathode hermetically sealed) with $20 to $23 scrap value per pound.

    As Dr. Holmes one of my college professors said to me "electronic devices are only going to get smaller, faster and cheaper", that was 1981. It helps to determine scrap value of E-waste, by thinking about the changes in electronics, what you have seen in your own life. We all know that today's high-performance electronic gadget we just purchased, will be replaced with a newer gadget, that does more for us, with greater performing functions and a marketing pitch that suggest we need now! Still expensive PM's are used in electronics (more gold now is used than even 10 years ago), mostly due to number of units sold (everyone has high tech. devices now). The other high PM use electronics is in devices where lives and money determine the "need" to use over the cost to use factors (medical, military, transportation, communication, environment, research, testing) is why high gold content will almost always be needed.

    Can you read the part numbers on those three metal TO devices? Are maybe give me the diameters and height dimensions? Those ceramic caps should also have ID info, I'm looking for date codes specifically. Hope this helps you.

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  13. #111
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    thanks for your reply...the 3 can transistors i pictured have a map of texas with a design inside...the writing is worn..probably texas instrements...the number is P-31 with 320 underneath..my son in law buys and sells cars from auction and he won a low mile electric company van with these old circuit boards...got my first ag/ta caps from them...thanks again!

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  15. #112
    bigburtchino started this thread.
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    It's been awhile since I added anything to this thread, mostly because "Nothing to Add". I have actually been very busy and doing more scrapping than ever. Do more E-waste than I ever thought I would be doing (all good), one of the E-waste streams that's new for me, is scrap cordless phones. With cell phones just about eliminating the "land line", there are tons of these cordless phone handsets and base units to be found in waste streams.

    When it comes down to scrapping these things, there's not much to scrap (plastic, wire, a circuit board and a little scrap metal). As with anything, some models, manufactures and release dates have more scrap value than others. Most are low end consumer scrap grades!

    What is consistent on most of the circuit boards, almost all have SMD type Tantalum capacitors. Some will have just a few, others will have more than a dozen. This is also where I found my first "non-magnetic" Tantalum capacitors.

    All of my Tantalum capacitor's have had some magnetic properties, usually a "strong" magnetic pull. Working with cordless phone scrap I'm finding about half of the SMD Tantalum capacitors have absolutely no magnetic "pull". Just thought I would "pass" that info on!

    i

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