Gold is Gold – Scrap Gold Can Be Found in the Strangest Places.

With the economy in the shape it’s in, we get calls from people asking some pretty strange questions. Every week, we get asked if we buy other metals, or if we just deal in gold. The answer is that we don’t buy aluminum cans or old copper wire, and we don’t do much with silver, either. (When you consider the difference between $18 an ounce versus $1200 an ounce, you can understand why.) But if something is made of gold, we are interested. However, there needs to be a substantial gold component, or the processing doesn’t justify the value received.

Things We Do Buy

Of course, gold jewelry is the biggest portion of our business. We also buy some gold coins, but that isn’t really something we specialize in. We really are recyclers of gold, not speculators. But anything that is made of gold is fair game.

We have purchased the filings and grindings that are left over from the jewelry making process. We have also bought some of the sprues and other little odds and ends that are cut off after a piece of jewelry is removed from the mold. We have dealt with some amateur jewelers who have rings and whatnot that they never finished, and now the gold is worth more than when they bought it.

Gold crowns also have scrap gold value.

Even old dental gold has value.

Another source of gold can be old dental work. This week we dealt with a family that was cleaning out the home after their mother had died. Tucked away in a drawer were four old crowns – with the teeth still in them! When they called to ask if we would buy them, we said we would – but asked that they get a pair of pliers and try to remove all the ‘extra material’ that wasn’t gold. When we met, there was only one that still had the old filling still in it. A little judicious pressure applied from a pair of pliers, and all we had left was four little pieces of 18 karat gold. Of course, crowns aren’t all that big or heavy – who would want that much weight in their mouth? – but we were still able to give them $90 dollars. Even though the wife thought it was a little creepy, who would throw $90 dollars in the trash?

Things We Don’t Buy

We once received a call from a business that had 1100 computer chips. Each of the prongs on each chip was plated in gold. Unfortunately, the advancements in manufacturing technology means that they can get by with less and less gold in their products, so the amount of gold in each chip was only worth a few cents. Compared to some of the older Pentium processors – which had about $10 of gold per chip – the cost to grind them down and extract the gold was prohibitive.

This week, we had a lady show up with 6 gold plated spoons and forks. Unfortunately, gold plated products are also not worth the trouble to try to extract the gold. Once everything is melted down, the percentage of gold makes processing cost prohibitive.

Keep Your Eyes Open For Sources of Scrap Gold

Bottom line – gold is gold, and it’s worth money. While we might scratch our heads sometimes, we will try to work with you to figure out if what you have is valuable. If not, well, you haven’t lost much. And who knows? You might stumble on something that has real value.

Popularity: 24% [?]

Beware of Gold Buying “Experts”

This week, I bought some old gold coins that a customer had pulled out of an old belt buckle. There was one $20 gold coin from 1905 and four tiny $1 gold coins from the 1850′s. Unfortunately, they had been pressed and soldered into the buckle, and they were pretty much ruined in the extraction process. Despite this, I thought I would go to a couple of coin dealers here in Kansas City to see if they were salvageable.

My first stop was a fairly respectable looking pawn shop in a nice neighborhood. They advertised its owner as a former Numismatic Society president, so I thought I’d give them a shot. He glanced at the coins, declared them to be scrap and said he’d test them to see if they were real gold and make an offer. I declined to wait around for that. His brusque manner annoyed me. He acted like I was bothering him by trying to do business with him. No wonder people want to avoid the pawn shops.

My next stop was a store that claimed to deal in precious metals, gems and rare gold coins. They took one look at the coins and told me they were fake. Since I had already tested the coins when I bought them, I was a bit taken aback. When I asked if he meant fake coins, he stated that they weren’t even gold. When I pressed him on how he knew that, he told me that he could tell just by looking. I asked him how that was possible (because it isn’t – as I’ve noted before in my post Can you tell real gold by sight?). He just showed me a different coin that he had on display and then declared that my coin wasn’t the same color, so it wasn’t gold. He declared definitively that my coin was trash and no one would ever buy it. Of course that wasn’t true, and we later melted it down as scrap and got a full ounce of gold out of it.

To me, those sorts of actions are completely unacceptable. They demonstrate that the gold buyer is either ignorant or uninterested. In either case, they don’t deserve to stay in business.

The bottom line: Just because someone claims to be a gold buying expert, that doesn’t make it true. When you want to sell gold jewelry or gold coins, don’t let anyone make statements that they can’t back up without positive proof. If I had listened to the self-proclaimed expert, I would have thrown away a full ounce of pure gold. While it’s true that not all that glitters is gold, some things that glitter are.

Popularity: 1% [?]