Originally Posted by
anonymous
if that is really gold plating on the board and not just a gold colored solder cover then yes high grade. Thats why i said test it first.
But looking at just the components, its all large resistors and ceramic capacitors. I see a couple gold pin transistors too, but i assumed if scrapping those would be cherrypicked.
Anyways could you explain why from just the components you would grade this as high grade? Im new here as well and would like to observe others grading methods.
Also bear is right, probably can get more from a collector than just scrapping it.
If I were to grade all of my boards by just components, then most of mine would be low grade. But I (and most of us here) don't grade on that, but grade by gold content, fingers, and "hidden" gold. You could also call motherboards low grade by just grading on components because you cant see that much gold, but there is gold that you can't on the surface. If I had a board that was all capacitors (the silo things) but it had gold contacts, it would be a high grade board. I am pretty sure most of the buyers on the forum would give you some kind of high grade pricing for this without testing it.
Also, there is no "Gold colored solder" on that board. The "Solder" on that board is normal colored solder. The gold color you see are gold traces, and are usually copper on low grade. These boards have large gold plated areas and all of the contacts are gold plated, placing it higher on the grading spectrum.
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