Depends.
If it is gold plated, it is negligible.
Best to gather alot of plated pins & fingers & eBay them or sell them to a recovery service. (eBay is usually best)
If it is a Gold pin that (from the large end) appears to be a thick layer of gold around a thin steel or aluminum color center, that pin could be as much as 2/3 gold!
Alot of pins can = alot of gold.
Hope this helps!
How many pins are there in 4 quarts
Very little. Some gold-plating is barely a tenth of a micro-metre (0.000005 inches) thick, and when you look at the small area that's actually plated... It would be extremely unusual to find a circuit board with anywhere near a tenth of a gram (0.0035 ounces) of gold on it.
The most common use is to hold a specimen for dissection. Before ray boxes were readily available, we used to use large pins for optics experiments.
Medical
To hold the fabric together while they sew.
Some pins on the microprocessors are gold, but not pure gold or solid gold, it is a gold alloy. Best way to find out is to bring it to a jewelry for a simple test of how much gold could be inside.
yes
Yes. The pins that connect the CPU to the motherboard are made of gold.
The plug in pins on most processors are made of gold plated aluminum.
SODIMM 200 PIN or 72 for 32bit processor
It has to be around 6-8 carats, but its near impossible to get the gold out of the pins and wire
Gold is used in electronics for connectors. The only gold in a cable will be the thin plating on the connecting pins of the connector itself. It is used because gold does not corrode and therefore does not suffer from poor connections due to oxidization of the connector surface. The total amount of gold will be measured in milligrams.
clean your ram slot and ram pins
If you mean literal fingers (human phalanges), they are used for entering data into the computer and controlling the computer. "Finger" is also the name of a network protocol, though not a very secure one since unencrypted personal data is sent. Then there are what people call "gold fingers" which are circuit board traces, pins off of chips, and other "gold" pieces of computer scrap. They are used to make electrical connections inside of computers. In reality, they don't contain a lot of gold and take many of these pieces to make an ounce.
In some cases, maybe plated.
no it means nothing
Exactly im not sure but, they are usually gold pins sometimes gold blocks but they are about 9 carrot so not worth selling :)