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  1. #1
    ACCR started this thread.
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    Thumbs up Buying Gold Bearing Electronic Scrap, Silver Plated Brass, and Red Metal Scrap!!!

    We are looking to purchase Gold, Silver, and Copper bearing items. Our list is constantly growing. Pricing is as follows for the items we are seeking:
    Telecom $6.35/lb.
    Low Grade Telecom $4.00/lb.
    Gold Capped Ceramic Chipboard/Gold Trace Board/Old CNC Board w/ Fingers $8.50 -
    $15.00/lb.
    Laptop Motherboard $4.90/lb.
    Large Socket Motherboard - All Types $4.90/lb.
    Small Plastic Green P4 Motherboard $2.65/lb.
    Metal Socket Green Motherboard $2.00/lb.
    Foreign Colored Motherboard $1.30/lb.
    Newer Small Plastic AMD Socket Motherboard $1.15/lb.
    Newer Integrated CPU Motherboard $1.00/lb.
    #1 Server Board $6.35/lb.
    #2 Server Board $3.60/lb.
    Clean Finger Cards - No Fan No Heatsink $5.00/lb.
    Finger Cards - Small Fan / Heatsink $2.50/lb.
    Finger Cards - Oversized Fan / Heatsink $1.25/lb.
    Trimmed Finger Cards $0.50/lb. - $2.50/lb.
    High Grade Peripheral Board $2.65/lb.
    Low Grade Peripheral Board $1.30/lb.
    Cell Phone w/ Battery or Back Cover $1.50/lb.
    Smart Phone w/o Battery $2.75/lb.
    Old Cell Phone w/o Battery (No Smart Phones) $5.50/lb.
    Wireless Handheld Keyboard Laser Scanner (No Batteries) $4.00/lb.
    Gold Memory $25.00/lb.
    Silver Memory $10.75/lb.
    Rambus Ram $9.75/lb.
    Slot Processor $19.00/lb.
    High Grade Hard Drive Board - IDE/SCUZZY $14.50/lb.
    Low Grade Hard Drive Board - SATA $7.00/lb.
    Clean Cell Phone Board $12.50/lb.
    IC Chips - No Dallas Switches $8.00/lb.
    CD Board $5.10/lb.
    Connector Ends $1.10/lb.
    Low Grade Brown Board/Mid Grade Green Power Board $0.40/lb.
    Whole Laptops $1.10/lb.
    Partial Laptops (Motherboard & Good Screen) $0.85/lb.
    Partial Laptops (Motherboard & Bad Screen) $0.70/lb.
    Whole Cream Tower $0.35/lb.
    Partial Cream Tower $0.25/lb.
    Whole Black Tower $0.35/lb.
    Partial Black Tower $0.25/lb.
    Whole Server $0.60/lb.
    Partial Server $0.40/lb.
    CD/Floppy Drives $0.25/lb.
    Hard Drives w/ Board $0.60/lb.
    Bent/punched HD w/ Board $0.45/lb.
    Shredded HD w/ Board $0.40/lb.
    Hard Drive w/o Board $0.35/lb.
    Bent, Punched, or Shredded HD w/o Board $0.25/lb.
    Power Supply w/ Wire $0.35/lb.
    Power Supply w/o Wire $0.20/lb.
    Adapters w/ Wire $0.30/lb.
    Adapters w/o Wire $0.15/lb.
    Battery Back-Up Complete $0.10/lb.
    Battery Back-Ups Incomplete (Must have Board and Transformer) $0.10/lb.
    Taped Lead Acid Battery (Untaped -.05/lb.) $0.10/lb.
    Taped Li-Ion Laptop Battery (Untaped - .50/lb. Charge) $.00/lb.
    Taped Li-Ion Cell Phone Battery (Untaped - .50/lb. Charge) $.00/lb.
    Bare Bright Copper $2.85/lb.
    #1 Copper $2.75/lb.
    #2 Copper $2.60/lb.
    Yellow Brass $1.25/lb.
    Red Brass $1.50/lb.
    Silver Plated Flatware & Hollowware $3.25/lb.
    Gold Plated Flatware & Hollowware $4.00/lb.
    #1 Insulated Wire $1.00/lb.
    #2 Insulated Wire $0.80/lb.
    #3 Insulated Wire $0.60/lb.
    Copper Yokes with Glass $0.40/lb.
    Copper Yokes w/o Glass $0.50/lb.
    Clean Aluminum Copper Heatsinks $0.60/lb.
    Clean Processed Aluminum Copper Heatsinks $0.30/lb.
    Dirty Aluminum Copper Heatsinks $0.30/lb.
    Aluminum Copper Radiator Ends $0.75/lb.
    Dirty Aluminum Copper Radiators $1.20/lb.
    Clean Aluminum Copper Radiators $1.40/lb.
    17 Inch LCD Monitor (Not Scrap) 0.00
    19 Inch & Up LCD Monitor (Not Scrap) 0.00
    LCD Scrap -.10/lb.
    Surface Mount Display Tantalum Capacitors $9.00/lb.

    8086 Gold Cap Gold Leg $210.00/lb.
    386/486 $195.00/lb.
    Motorola Gold Cap $195.00/lb.
    Foreign Gold Cap - LSI/Nortel/Sun/DEC/NEC/Etc. $120.00/lb.
    Pentium Pro Gold Cap $120.00/lb.
    Double Side Gold Cap $120.00/lb.
    Cyrix/IBM/Via/WinChip/AMD K5 Single Side Gold Cap $70.00/lb.
    Pentium 1 Ceramic $49.00/lb.
    Black Fiber $50.00/lb.
    AMD Ceramic $49.00/lb.
    AMD Aluminum $30.00/lb.
    Pentium 3 Green Fiber w/o Heatsink $19.00/lb.
    Pentium 4 Green Fiber w/ Heatsink $9.25/lb.
    No Pin Processor $6.50/lb.
    Clean Gold Fingers $40.00/lb.

    We are also looking to purchase all 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th generation I-series processors and Core 2 Quad Processors for more than scrap. Pricing is as follows:1156 1st Generation I-series
    Please go to boardsort.com for updated salvage chip pricing

    End of pricing
    Any chips that test bad will be bought at current scrap value or returned upon the request of the seller. Seller assumes all shipping and tracking responsibility.​ Please include packaging slip. Shipping is to zip code 44601. Any questions please contact us at Email:acetech2222@gmail.com Phone: 330-821-0500


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    Last edited by ACCR; 04-09-2024 at 09:28 AM. Reason: Some updated pricing added
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  3. #181
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    Quote Originally Posted by ACCR View Post
    Silver finally seems to be on the move.... While many things have been hitting all time highs - gold, cryptos, stock market, etc... does anybody think that silver will hit an all time high in the next few months?
    I don't know about timing, but inflation is bound to exert upward pressure all commodities. PM's have traditionally been used to hedge against inflation so that would result in higher demand. That would be an important factor to take into account.



    I suppose the question would be: Will silver serve as an investment method to preserve wealth -or- will it outperform inflation to result in a net gain ?

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  5. #182
    ACCR started this thread.
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    That's a great question. My thoughts are that it will spike up somewhere between $30-$35/oz. Net gains would probably depend on what type of and when the silver was purchased. I bought a couple rounds a few years back when it was closer to $19/oz. I had to pay $5.00 over spot price. Where silver currently sits I would be able to sell it and make a profit. It might only be about $10-$15 for what I have, but looking at the bright side it would definitely be worth a few cups of coffee for my efforts.
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  7. #183
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    Ummm ... thinking back ... it's been over 40 years since i bought & sold silver as an investment / hedge against inflation. The concern back in the late 70's & early 80's was that the U.S. economy might collapse and that the dollar could lose all of it's value. You would be in a pickle if you didn't have some form of currency to buy and sell things with. The idea was that you could use silver to purchase smaller things like groceries and pay for the bigger things like a car or a house with gold.

    Sounds crazy, but i actually made a significant down payment on a new truck with gold. As a young fulla just starting out ... i didn't have any kind of a credit history but the owner of the dealership was more than happy to co-sign my truck loan because he figured me for being a good risk.

    Back then ... it was common to buy junk silver coins at $ 1,000.00 face. You were essentially buying the silver content which was generally about 90%.

    They still do something similar today.

    https://www.jmbullion.com/90-silver-...10-face-value/

    You don't pay as much over spot this way. Another advantage is that most people recognize US issued coins as being 90% silver so it's easier to do transactions with them. It's often a question with bullion bars. (They might be fakes.)

    Anyhow ... i was rummaging around and found a good historical silver chart that goes back 100 years. The nice thing about it is that is it's inflation adjusted to the value of today's dollars. Makes it easier to compare back then to where we are today.

    Silver hit it's all time high of $ 142.61/oz back in January of 1980. The price peaks and crashes seem to roughly correspond to US economic recessions. It's high going in and it bottoms out as we are exiting a recession.

    https://www.macrotrends.net/1470/his...100-year-chart

  8. #184
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    Quote Originally Posted by hills View Post
    Ummm ... thinking back ... it's been over 40 years since i bought & sold silver as an investment / hedge against inflation. The concern back in the late 70's & early 80's was that the U.S. economy might collapse and that the dollar could lose all of it's value. You would be in a pickle if you didn't have some form of currency to buy and sell things with. The idea was that you could use silver to purchase smaller things like groceries and pay for the bigger things like a car or a house with gold.

    Sounds crazy, but i actually made a significant down payment on a new truck with gold. As a young fulla just starting out ... i didn't have any kind of a credit history but the owner of the dealership was more than happy to co-sign my truck loan because he figured me for being a good risk.

    Back then ... it was common to buy junk silver coins at $ 1,000.00 face. You were essentially buying the silver content which was generally about 90%.

    They still do something similar today.

    https://www.jmbullion.com/90-silver-...10-face-value/

    You don't pay as much over spot this way. Another advantage is that most people recognize US issued coins as being 90% silver so it's easier to do transactions with them. It's often a question with bullion bars. (They might be fakes.)

    Anyhow ... i was rummaging around and found a good historical silver chart that goes back 100 years. The nice thing about it is that is it's inflation adjusted to the value of today's dollars. Makes it easier to compare back then to where we are today.

    Silver hit it's all time high of $ 142.61/oz back in January of 1980. The price peaks and crashes seem to roughly correspond to US economic recessions. It's high going in and it bottoms out as we are exiting a recession.

    https://www.macrotrends.net/1470/his...100-year-chart
    Silver Thursday (1980): The Hunt Brothers’ Attempt to Corner the Silver Market and the Resulting Market Crash


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  10. #185
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    Quote Originally Posted by alloy2 View Post
    Silver Thursday (1980): The Hunt Brothers’ Attempt to Corner the Silver Market and the Resulting Market Crash
    Absolutely! You nailed it alloy.

    Just dumb luck when i was starting out as a young man. I bought in when the price was a bit lower and sold just before the crash. Right place / right time was all.

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  12. #186
    ACCR started this thread.
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    Markets are up and prices are updated
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  13. #187
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    There is a lot happening on the global level. Gold set a record high of $ 2364.00/oz on Tuesday. The link below provides pretty good information on some of the different forces in play.

    https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/09/econo...ghs/index.html

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