How to Make Money Recycling Platinum, Silver, and Gold Wire
Platinum, silver, and gold wire are most often found among the supplies at companies that make or repair jewelry, such as jewelry stores and jewelry factories.
Where will you find those precious-metal wires in those facilities?
As part of generalized scrap, like bench and floor sweepings.
In jewelry-making supplies. Often, wire will still be rolled up on spools of unused materials.
Make Money Recycling Platinum, Gold, and Silver Wire
A few years ago, it was time to replace the muffler/silencer on a riding mower. The company that owned it ordered a new muffler and yanked the old one off. At that point, the owner noticed that it had been installed by wrapping wire around one of the pipes that came out of the old muffler.
That wire, which was about two feet long and weighed about 2/10 of a Troy Ounce, turned out to be made of pure platinum. It was worth more than $200.00.
Profiteering Alert: Is Jewelry Scrap the Most Common Source of Karat Gold?
We’re going to crawl out on a limb today and state our opinion that karat gold jewelry scrap is probably the biggest and best source of recyclable gold. Why do we think that? Because you don’t have to go panning in the Yukon to find jewelry scrap or (in most cases) hike around fields with a metal detector. Karat jewelry gold scrap is a lot easier to find than that, as the following stories illustrate.
Complicated Precious Metal Recycling Problems Made Easy
Recycling precious metals often involves analyzing and refining big messy batches of mixed materials. People who own these mixed lots of material know that gold or silver or platinum is “in there” somewhere, but don’t know where it is, what it is, or how much of it is present.
Get Wired! How to Unravel Big Dollars from Wires Made of Gold, Platinum and other Precious Metals
If you’re emptying an old factory that produced products that contained metals, chances are good that you will discover wire that contains precious metals. You might find coils of it in storage areas. You might find little rolls of it hiding in drawers. Unless the previous owners labeled their supplies carefully or the wire is still in its original packaging, you have very little way of knowing what kind of wire you have.