It's out of context, so it's hard for me to comprehend what i'm looking at. I don't have any direct experience with refining. I do get the concept of the container being vibrated to settle the heavies. If you did something like that with a glass test tube ... you would be able to see the graduations from heavy to light going up the tube.

I suppose you could say that there's quite a bit to the refining process. It's not something that you could just jump into and start making money hand over fist. It's probably years of work with a fair amount of time and money invested to actually get a small processing plant into operation. Like anything else ... there's a learning curve and you're bound to make learning mistakes along the way.

Just an opinion, but i wonder if people get distracted by the flash. They say ohh wow .... there's an ounce of gold in every computer. Maybe it's a bit of gold fever ?



I wonder if it would make more sense to look at the whole picture of what's there. Perhaps consider the value of the base metals like copper and possibly nickel. The solder would have value.

Seems like a rational first step would be to separate all the metals from the plastics and fiberglass then ?

Get that mastered first and then take it from there ?