Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 22

Some Nice Ceramic CPU's Pictures

| General Electronics Recycling
  1. #1
    HiTechMike started this thread.
    HiTechMike's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Mar 2014
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    200
    Thanks
    167
    Thanked 386 Times in 111 Posts

    Some Nice Ceramic CPU's Pictures

    I sold a bunch of boxes ceramic CPU's that finally got full by category. I didn't take any pictures (I should have because it was real nice load!), but here are some of the nice ones and boxes I am still filling up.



    Gold cap and gold legs








    Life is tough, but it's tougher when you're stupid. - John Wayne

  2. The Following 13 Users say Thank You for This Post by HiTechMike:



  3. #2
    sledge's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Central Indiana
    Posts
    2,717
    Thanks
    4,534
    Thanked 4,240 Times in 1,609 Posts
    Those Proms go for $250/lb right?
    I'm so into scrapping.. When my Steel Toe Boots Wear out, I cut the Steel out of them and recycle the Toe!

  4. #3
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Jacksonville, NC
    Posts
    4,917
    Thanks
    15,632
    Thanked 5,861 Times in 2,713 Posts
    Sweeeet! Mike
    "Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}

    Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked

  5. #4
    HiTechMike started this thread.
    HiTechMike's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Mar 2014
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    200
    Thanks
    167
    Thanked 386 Times in 111 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by sledge View Post
    Those Proms go for $250/lb right?
    That would be nice!! There is not much weight there, but pound for pound those in the fourth picture are supposed to be the highest gold yielding, I'm pretty sure.

  6. #5
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    From my understanding the Pentium pro has .30 grams of gold content. Maybe .35 grams of gold. Say it takes 3 pros to equal a gram of gold. Weigh 3 pros and see the weight or throw pros on the scale until you get a pound of material.

    Now take some mixed proms and throw them on the scale until you get a pound. Now set down and do some measuring and you will see that the mixed proms have a greater value than the pros pound per pound. Those proms sell for $250.00 a pound on ebay.

    People have to understand what a socket pulled chip is and a desoldered chip is. A socket pulled chip is one pulled from a ic socket without solder. It is a clean chip with the gold plating in place. A desoldered chip is one that you take a heat gun to desolder it or cut it from the board. When anything has been soldered to the board and you desolder it some of the gold stays behind and is lost.

    Socket pulled no solder on the leads pins or legs whatever you want to call them will bring a premium if there is no solder on them.
    Chips that are attached and desoldered from a board don't bring that much due to lose of gold and the tin solder.

    The size of chip or item is a big factor in the price paid. The smaller a item is and the more it takes to make a pound the more precious metals to be recovered.

    I hope people understand what I am saying.

    When dealing in this type of business everyone involved needs to leave a little something on the table for the next person to make a little money. People cant lick all the cream out of the bowl and leave sour milk for the ones behind them.

    I want to put up a buyers ad in the buyers forum but I would be a selective in what I would buy. I would rather meet sellers in person versus mail in sellers.
    Last edited by eastky; 09-08-2016 at 06:03 PM. Reason: misspelling

  7. #6
    sledge's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Central Indiana
    Posts
    2,717
    Thanks
    4,534
    Thanked 4,240 Times in 1,609 Posts
    The MAY sell for $250/lb on ebay to someone who is delusional and has a case of "gold-fever"
    I will crunch the numbers. On 1 Lb of these you are looking at between 2-4g per 1 lb.
    Spot price for 1 gram of gold as of today is $42.96
    So if you are on the low end- 1 lb will net you $85.92 if you recover 2g
    3g = $128.88
    4g = $171.84

    So you see- if someone pays $250/lb for these.. they are a lollipop.


    Btw: It takes 5.33 Pent Pro's to make a lb. They sit at 3.0 oz each.

    And just FYI.. we know what a de-soldered vs pulled chip is. We are smarter than you are giving us credit for!

    Also the smaller or larger chip size is irrelevant in what it pays. It's the content of recoverable material that matters. That is why a smaller chip 386 or 486 pays more than an Pentium Pro per lb. More bang for the buck.. more gold in the chip per lb.
    Last edited by sledge; 09-08-2016 at 08:03 PM.

  8. The Following User Says Thank You to sledge for This Post:


  9. #7
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by sledge View Post
    The MAY sell for $250/lb on ebay to someone who is delusional and has a case of "gold-fever"
    I will crunch the numbers. On 1 Lb of these you are looking at between 2-4g per 1 lb.
    Spot price for 1 gram of gold as of today is $42.96
    So if you are on the low end- 1 lb will net you $85.92 if you recover 2g
    3g = $128.88
    4g = $171.84

    So you see- if someone pays $250/lb for these.. they are a lollipop.


    Btw: It takes 5.33 Pent Pro's to make a lb. They sit at 3.0 oz each.

    And just FYI.. we know what a de-soldered vs pulled chip is. We are smarter than you are giving us credit for!

    Also the smaller or larger chip size is irrelevant in what it pays. It's the content of recoverable material that matters. That is why a smaller chip 386 or 486 pays more than an Pentium Pro per lb. More bang for the buck.. more gold in the chip per lb.
    How many pins are on the pro chip? I don't have one because I didn't buy into the 1 gram per chip hype.

  10. #8
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Jan 2013
    Location
    Kansas
    Posts
    182
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 208 Times in 87 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by HiTechMike View Post
    That would be nice!! There is not much weight there, but pound for pound those in the fourth picture are supposed to be the highest gold yielding, I'm pretty sure.
    I agree. Although, it takes a heck of a lot of them to get a pound. The ones I have look like the majority of yours( gold cap fills the center area ) and measure right at 15/16" sq. They weigh 4 grams each = 112 per pound. Can't remember where it was but it seems like I saw some one was paying $245 per pound. Interestingly mine are marked "AMD" and "Intel 1982" on the same chip.

  11. #9
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Jan 2013
    Location
    Kansas
    Posts
    182
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 208 Times in 87 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by eastky View Post
    How many pins are on the pro chip?
    Ok, I'll bite. It appears there's about 387 pins on a Pentium Pro.

    Quote Originally Posted by eastky View Post
    I don't have one because I didn't buy into the 1 gram per chip hype.
    Not sure I understand. Are you throwing them away since they don't have a full gram of gold in each?
    Last edited by Flinthills; 09-08-2016 at 10:28 PM.

  12. #10
    eesakiwi's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Dec 2010
    Location
    NZ
    Posts
    2,531
    Thanks
    2,909
    Thanked 2,556 Times in 1,227 Posts
    Just wondering, what would be a good eBay price for what's in the pics, and what's a good escrap price.?

    I have never seen a rectangle pentium pro, the best I have seen (whole) is a K5. I have reqd that a Pentium is 0.5grams Gold and its downhill from there.
    Is there a defining accurate reference table somewhere for the amount of Gold in CPU's?

  13. #11
    sledge's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Central Indiana
    Posts
    2,717
    Thanks
    4,534
    Thanked 4,240 Times in 1,609 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by eastky View Post
    How many pins are on the pro chip? I don't have one because I didn't buy into the 1 gram per chip hype.
    It isn't just the pins or the gold cap that contains gold. If ceramic chips are crushed.. there is gold INSIDE the chip.. a wafer if you will.
    It isn't just what you can see from the outside.. sometimes it is also what is on the inside that matters!

    This is what is inside a Pentium Pro:
    http://photos1.blogger.com/x/blogger...ipart67085.jpg

  14. The Following 6 Users say Thank You for This Post by sledge:


  15. #12
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by sledge View Post
    It isn't just the pins or the gold cap that contains gold. If ceramic chips are crushed.. there is gold INSIDE the chip.. a wafer if you will.
    It isn't just what you can see from the outside.. sometimes it is also what is on the inside that matters!

    This is what is inside a Pentium Pro:
    http://photos1.blogger.com/x/blogger...ipart67085.jpg
    That just goes to tell how ill informed you are. There isn't any gold inside the ceramic. Take the gold plated cap off and you will have gold under the silicon die that is soldered with gold solder to hold the chip in place. A Pentium pro has about 1/3rd of a gram of gold in it.

    You cant compare a 386 or 486 cpu to the Pentium pro weight or size wise because the 386 and 486 had a higher gold content in the chips to begin with.

    People may not believe it but in collecting gold plated things the lighter and smaller the item the higher the gold content.

  16. #13
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Flinthills View Post
    Ok, I'll bite. It appears there's about 387 pins on a Pentium Pro.



    Not sure I understand. Are you throwing them away since they don't have a full gram of gold in each?
    Thanks for the pin count. Just wanted to see how many it had. I have only had 1 Pentium pro and put it on ebay.
    I don't collect cpus because everyone thinks they are dripping with gold. I collect small gold plated items that don't weigh much and takes a bunch of them to make a pound.

    14 and 16 pin purple or white gold plated leads with gold plated cap. That's the money.

  17. #14
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by eesakiwi View Post
    Just wondering, what would be a good eBay price for what's in the pics, and what's a good escrap price.?

    I have never seen a rectangle pentium pro, the best I have seen (whole) is a K5. I have reqd that a Pentium is 0.5grams Gold and its downhill from there.
    Is there a defining accurate reference table somewhere for the amount of Gold in CPU's?
    Safe estimate for the Pentium pro would be 1/3rd of a gram. Three pros would put you in at a little less than a gram of gold.

  18. #15
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by sledge View Post
    Also the smaller or larger chip size is irrelevant in what it pays. It's the content of recoverable material that matters. That is why a smaller chip 386 or 486 pays more than an Pentium Pro per lb. More bang for the buck.. more gold in the chip per lb.
    Thanks for making my point on a smaller item versus a bigger item. Smaller items have a higher recovery value than big items.

    Smaller light weight more to make a pound equals more money in return.

  19. #16
    ScrappinRed's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Jan 2012
    Location
    texas
    Posts
    709
    Thanks
    319
    Thanked 710 Times in 342 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by eastky View Post
    That just goes to tell how ill informed you are.

    sledge has 2437 in this forum, and you have 13... HALF of which are in this thread alone. Settle down and have a conversation, not an argument. You have no weight to throw around in this forum.
    ~You have to start somewhere to get anywhere~

  20. The Following 5 Users say Thank You for This Post by ScrappinRed:


  21. #17
    ryanw's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Oct 2012
    Location
    TX
    Posts
    1,312
    Thanks
    526
    Thanked 1,290 Times in 648 Posts
    What I see in picture #2 is $5,000-10,000+ in potential motherboard sales that were scrapped at $3/lb!

  22. The Following 2 Users say Thank You for This Post by ryanw:


  23. #18
    sledge's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Central Indiana
    Posts
    2,717
    Thanks
    4,534
    Thanked 4,240 Times in 1,609 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by eastky View Post
    That just goes to tell how ill informed you are. There isn't any gold inside the ceramic. Take the gold plated cap off and you will have gold under the silicon die that is soldered with gold solder to hold the chip in place. A Pentium pro has about 1/3rd of a gram of gold in it.

    You cant compare a 386 or 486 cpu to the Pentium pro weight or size wise because the 386 and 486 had a higher gold content in the chips to begin with.

    People may not believe it but in collecting gold plated things the lighter and smaller the item the higher the gold content.
    I find you amusing! I show you proof of what is inside a chip, and yet I am "ill informed?"
    Since you have never held one in your hand, by your own admission, and apparently know little to nothing about this subject. I find my time better spent elsewhere.
    Providing facts to you is apparently a waste of time!

  24. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by sledge:


  25. #19
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2013
    Location
    eastern kentucky
    Posts
    27
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 25 Times in 12 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by sledge View Post
    I find you amusing! I show you proof of what is inside a chip, and yet I am "ill informed?"
    Since you have never held one in your hand, by your own admission, and apparently know little to nothing about this subject. I find my time better spent elsewhere.
    Providing facts to you is apparently a waste of time!
    Glad you find you find me amusing. I held a Pentium pro in my hand. Only 1 and put it on ebay.

    Going to take Reds advice and not argue with you.

  26. #20
    HiTechMike started this thread.
    HiTechMike's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Mar 2014
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    200
    Thanks
    167
    Thanked 386 Times in 111 Posts
    Wow, that digressed rather quickly...

  27. The Following 4 Users say Thank You for This Post by HiTechMike:



  28. Similar threads on the Scrap Metal Forum

    1. AMD Ceramic Pentium
      By F350scrapper in forum E-Waste Grading and Identification
      Replies: 9
      Last Post: 03-31-2015, 10:41 PM
    2. Post pictures or links of pictures
      By chzman in forum Off Topic Discussions
      Replies: 9
      Last Post: 04-21-2014, 11:01 PM
    3. This thead is a question - Monolithic Ceramic vs. Multi-layer Ceramic?
      By PinkFloydEffect in forum General Electronics Recycling
      Replies: 5
      Last Post: 03-17-2014, 01:30 PM
    4. Ceramic cpu
      By Jonniebrass in forum General Electronics Recycling
      Replies: 3
      Last Post: 11-14-2012, 07:03 PM
    5. My ceramic stash
      By Monj in forum General Electronics Recycling
      Replies: 10
      Last Post: 04-12-2012, 08:16 PM

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

 
Browse the Most Recent Threads
On SMF In THIS CATEGORY.





OR

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

The Scrap Metal Forum

    The Scrap Metal Forum is the #1 scrap metal recycling community in the world. Here we talk about the scrap metal business, making money, where we connect with other scrappers, scrap yards and more.

SMF on Facebook and Twitter

Twitter Facebook