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Gold Recovery Fever - Over 165 ounces Tech Gold Scrap from Austin Cyber Shop

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Uploaded by on Sep 23, 2010

This video is to show the items in our Gold Recovery Fever - Over 165 ounces Tech Gold Scrap listing on eBay. You can find us there under cyberinfinity, or you can go to our website at www.austincybershop.com.
Please note that your input toward this video and goldscrap is valued, however it is relevant for us to point out that these items do sell and people do make a living off of this. If you have any questions feel free to message us! :)

eBay:
http://stores.ebay.com/Cyberinfinity

Online Store:
http://www.austincybershop.com/

Blog:
http://cyberinfinity.com/

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Uploader Comments (AustinCyberShop)

  • @AustinCyberShop

    I don't want to choose sides, but if you insult people as a business owner, it's not sending out a very professional message.

    This was regarding Whackitov.

    Just saying...

  • @Djbiohazard1991 I just noticed that. The comment has been removed. We made these videos to show some of the closeups of the electronic gold scrap we had for sale. It sold a very long time ago. The only reason we keep it going is because there is ABSOLUTELY a lot of ignorance on the part of young and old minds that there is even the possibility of earning a decent living selling scrap. It is worth more than tossing it in the landfills. The message is clear even with the insults.

  • If you had 165 ounces of gold you wouldn't be making stupid videos like this.

  • @Plozen Well obviously if we had a means to remove the gold from our products (requires a factory, industrial zoning, and a large amount of money) we would. Because we do not, we sell to those who have a use for them.

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  • @AustinCyberShop When processing tons of scrap, yes. When processing a few pounds, no.

  • @silvermediastudio Not necessarily true, it is thin but quickly accumulates to become quite a bit of gold powder/flakes when processing the scrap (we have looked into the processes behind this to better answer our comments). Besides there are other profitable metallic components within the card that scrap buyers pull out as well.

  • @Plozen you're an idiot obviously all of it weights 165 ounces. Not the gold content.

  • @3rdRangerBat1000 Unless you simply enjoy the outdoors, I'd say don't waste your time. Those areas are generally controlled and you can't pull out anything meaningful.

  • @dougspair Typical electronics plating is around 2.54u. Sometimes thinner depending on the substrate and application. I don't know what your point was, you seemed to answer your own question and repeat what was said in all the other comments.

  • @silvermediastudio Do you have any idea how many Microns? even at 2-3 microns, that's only 1/10th of a thousandth of an inch. Somewhere on youtube a professional Gold Recovery guy was mentioning that it would take around 2,200 pounds of just bare mother and RAM boards to get an ounce of gold. The chips are probably worth more than that? And of course you need the space to work in, a good deal of electricity,and those very nasty and expensive acids. And neutralizers for when you tip over the acid

  • @mikebola my thoughts too, the white ceramic item appears to be a high power transistor package.

  • @thefailureoftheweek it looks like a piece of RF gear.

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