I've got another idea for you. Mount a 1/4" steel plate, with a lip on the back edge, right below your hands in the sandblasting cabinet. That way you can just set the PCB on the plate and use both hands with the hammer.
wow, too bad you didnt remove that cpu. 6/7th gen cpu despite it being a celeron -> an i3 of sorts. probably worth more than just scrap on a single unit. oh well.
I've got another idea for you. Mount a 1/4" steel plate, with a lip on the back edge, right below your hands in the sandblasting cabinet. That way you can just set the PCB on the plate and use both hands with the hammer.
looks like a waste of time.
all this for 5 cents worth of gold
wow, too bad you didnt remove that cpu. 6/7th gen cpu despite it being a celeron -> an i3 of sorts. probably worth more than just scrap on a single unit. oh well.
Probably was broken
@@orca984 probably not. It takes a real effort to kill a cpu
Great way to eperate these parts
Now send these to Northridge fix.
good thing you got that aluminum heatsink in there.
F A S T !
You're disposing of the waste created legally...right?
Look his other videos, it seems like he's just experimenting for now what the best method would be
Legally?
It's not illegal to put circuit boards and electronics in trash/recycling. Just no batteries.
@@Druid_Plow Trash...no electric recycling. and you know what I'm talking about, the slurry you get extracting gold. you now the chemical soup...