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Gold for extra Income

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  • Gold for extra Income

    To repeat what others have said, Avoid the Rip Off places.

    Their benefit is the cash is quick and the process is simple, but if we were trying to be frugal we wouldn't mind the little extra work now would we?

    Tip:
    First check with jewelery places to see if they can resell it or if they would want to. Pawn shops only base on weight and their light tools that tells if jewels are genuine.
    If you know the pieces are not nice looking or worn then move on to reading below

    Be prepared for some planning before you sell anything. You will need to know this first:

    How much gold do I have?

    Take your jewelery and separate it by the Karat marks 10k, 14k ect.
    Separate it by the jewels connected to it. Jewels pile 1 Jewels pile 2.

    Now karat is based off 24K being 100% pure rated. .999 fine
    So the percentage rates:

    10K/24 = 41.6%
    14K = 58.3%
    18K = 75%
    22k = 91.6%

    Now why was I so exact to the 1/10 percent? Because gold is over 1000 an ozt and at that just that price at .1% = 10 dollars. We value 10 dollars here.

    The total weight is the next thing to consider. The jewelery without the jewels will be simple to weigh and get a measure on. Jewels add a new thing to the mix cause their weight doesn't count as gold but you don't want to discard them cause they may be still valuable.

    The only measure consistent is grams. It is stable and doesn't change. A gram of sugar, is equal to a gram of gold. More on this after.

    So take solid metal (no jewels) mens band. It shows 1.8 grams. The stamp inside the ring says 14k. 1.8 x .583 = 1.04 grams of gold. Simple do do. I weigh my pieces and use a little thin masking tape to write the weight on the piece and so I don't count it again. And I write it down.
    (If you have a bunch of pieces all of the same Karat and no jewels then weigh them in a batch.)

    When you have jewels I cut 5% off the weight. It is heavy but doesn't keep me down. Some rings have way more then 5% weight, some hardly have that. You can use your judgement.


    Now why grams?
    An OZ of sugar is NOT equal to an OZ of gold. Because gold is measured in Troy. It is a separate measurement. You will be saddened if you weigh with a regular ounce measure.
    A regular ounce has 28.34 grams a Troy Oz has 31.10. That is 96 dollars difference at 1000/ozt
    Kitco has regular gold price updates with easy quick $$/gram price and $$/ozt

    Ok so you know what your gold weighs in grams. All you need now is a scale. Science supply, mining stores, and head shops are the best places to get the right scales. Yes I said Head Shops. Same scale to measure other substances works just fine and is compact. Cheap 15 nice 30 bucks. This will be your base tool. The buyers need a profit. So with your now actual gold weight numbers figure on getting 70% of that unless you can find a better buyer. The more quantity you have saved up the better the percentage you will get. All scrap gold/jewelery will need to be processed. It will be assayed, smelted and refined. This takes money. But to do 1 decent size batch is equal to 1 smaller batch. So they collect to bulk process and give simple percentage prices for the day.

    Call and find out. Ask about Percentage of Spot For scrap jewelery. *Spot is the daily price reported publicly on the market. Most places will tell you the percentage and criteria required. It is simple they have the answers ready. There are so many places that it is too much to list. But consider the price to cost of getting it there. Driving all across town might take that 5% extra unless your batch is large enough. Shipping it is a risk as well cause often they will send you packaging and it may not be so discreet about the contents like "Cash for gold" logo on the padded envelope. Or they may want you to ship it yourself, and that is a risk as well with no record unless you ship it registered with insurance for the value of the gold being shipped.

    Finding gold:

    Most of this was assuming you already had some gold you wanted to get money for.
    But finding the gold is the adventure. Don't make it special to go out of your way to find it. If you are already in the area then keep an eye out.
    Since this is a frugal saving forum I know I myself use thrift stores a lot and yard sales. Keep your eyes open for chance items. Not everything is a ring, necklace or bracelet. Look at Ties with the metal clips, or the decorative pins. Keep an eye in the silverware for silver items. Silver you can sell right with your gold and silverware is simple to weigh an get an ozt. Old watches.
    (One I found was a worn mickey mouse watch limited edition. It was shambles, the glass busted, the arms didn't work but twitched. 2 dollars but I spotted on the back small mark of 18k which had 4 grams of gold in the band and backing.)

    This is a warm up guide. There is a lot to getting gold from many many other places. But others require you to refine and make it more of a business rather then just as you are already finding specials.

  • #2
    Ok minor typo above. "Jewels Pile 1, No Jewels Pile 2"

    Feel free to ask me any questions on this. I have been doing this metal recycling for years. I also mine for gold as a side income and my exercise.

    Depending on how serious you wish to pursue this option I can give you more details to the possible items and methods to enhance your pursuit of this.

    Besides myself the most successful ones I have seen from this are the stay at home moms and dads. The time isn't locked in for doing this and it is very flexible.

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    • #3
      re:gold for extra money

      I think gold is a very good and immediate medium to make extra money. one can never regret it after investing in the gold.

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      • #4
        You are absolutely right. Nice thing about gold is it is tangible. You have it when you get it. Investments are just as solid as the paper they are written on they can end up vanishing.

        Often times instead of taking cash I will trade it for the bullion at 90% then I have a quick access to sell it at any time. The people are usually liking to get an even trade for 10%-15% keeping their inventory equal. Cash leaving is always a wonder of the price the next day. But they already have the gold at true gold dealerships.

        Ebay is another venue to unload your scrap if you wish to not deal with buyers. I've gotten 65% average on ebay offloading scrap I found quickly. With more credibility you can push that to 75 when people see the weights and karats are measured correctly they will bid better.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by BrianaWalker View Post
          one can never regret it after investing in the gold.
          Really? Have you looked at the long-term return on gold? It isn't pretty.

          On 1/2/13, gold was $1,693.
          On 8/1/13, gold was $1,315.

          That's down over 22% in 7 months. You don't think anybody is regretting that? And this doesn't include the fact that earlier it was up to nearly $1,900 so the total drop from the peak has been more like 31%.
          Steve

          * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
          * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
          * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

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          • #6
            Yeah buying at retail spot prices people definitely can regret it.

            I never buy gold for its full price. It is always discounted good deals with plenty of buffer for me often 50%. Otherwise you wouldn't be able to make much money on it.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by 4theluvofgold View Post
              Yeah buying at retail spot prices people definitely can regret it.

              I never buy gold for its full price. It is always discounted good deals with plenty of buffer for me often 50%. Otherwise you wouldn't be able to make much money on it.
              If you are buying at a 50% discount, then someone else is selling at a 50% discount. What is their motivation to do so? It seems to me that if they owned a great investment, they would be reluctant to sell for half its value.

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              • #8
                It is the obscure items mostly. Costume jewelery, or whatnot. Garage sales are an example. People put things for sale for prices they bought them for when gold was 300 an oz, they can't see selling them for even more than that and don't often think about it. So a large chain necklace with 1/2 oz gold would sell retail back when for 300 dollars. Now that 1/2 oz is worth over 600 gold alone. They gladly accept 300/400 if they just want what they paid for it. Many times they are just fine and dandy with the 100's in their hands. I put my working knowledge into it, and turn it over.

                I do more then just obvious pieces personally. I also recycle many other types of values. I recycle the values then send them to further recycling. Computer parts are examples.

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                • #9
                  Gold is the only solution is this downfall economy

                  Glad to have found you! I am "addicted" to gold after experiencing the downfall of our banks and the uncentainty of having money in the bank or bonds etc. Even small sums when bought repeatetly can create a stable future.

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