top | item 33447137 (no title) joelcollinsdc | 3 years ago It’s not like you can just crack it open and the expensive metal falls out though. It’s an industrial process. discuss order hn newest thepasswordis|3 years ago Ummm, no that’s almost exactly how it works actually.https://youtu.be/F8pd_p8gppE ipqk|3 years ago Sort of. The bulk of that material you see is just a ceramic substrate. There's only a few grams of valuable metals in each converter. tehwebguy|3 years ago Plus with literally hundreds of millions of dollars in profits there’s no problem doing some “industrial process“ bluGill|3 years ago It isn't hard to melt those metals out. I used melt aluminum in my backyard, and the forums for that had discussions on other metals. While a backyard process is not going to recover all the metal, it is still going to get plenty.
thepasswordis|3 years ago Ummm, no that’s almost exactly how it works actually.https://youtu.be/F8pd_p8gppE ipqk|3 years ago Sort of. The bulk of that material you see is just a ceramic substrate. There's only a few grams of valuable metals in each converter. tehwebguy|3 years ago Plus with literally hundreds of millions of dollars in profits there’s no problem doing some “industrial process“
ipqk|3 years ago Sort of. The bulk of that material you see is just a ceramic substrate. There's only a few grams of valuable metals in each converter.
tehwebguy|3 years ago Plus with literally hundreds of millions of dollars in profits there’s no problem doing some “industrial process“
bluGill|3 years ago It isn't hard to melt those metals out. I used melt aluminum in my backyard, and the forums for that had discussions on other metals. While a backyard process is not going to recover all the metal, it is still going to get plenty.
thepasswordis|3 years ago
https://youtu.be/F8pd_p8gppE
ipqk|3 years ago
tehwebguy|3 years ago
bluGill|3 years ago