

Melt value vs resale value: which price should you expect for gold?
Selling gold by melt value or resale value can change what you get by a big margin. Which one applies to your piece matters more than condition. What people usually mean by "melt value" Melt value is the raw metal price. It is based on the weight of pure gold inside an item and the current gold price. If a ring is 14k, the melt value counts only the gold portion (14 parts gold out of 24). You do not get paid for design, stones, or brand when an item is bought for melt. What r


How to ship a guitar or amp without ending up with a dented story
You open a box and the neck is twisted. That’s the worst: money gone and a repair bill that kills a sale. Low risk: local hand-off or short courier If the distance is short, avoid long transit. Hand delivery or a same-day local courier is best. You control the handling. Pack only light padding for short hops: a gig bag with towels can survive a quick ride. What to check before you hand it off: play it once, tighten knobs, and photograph every angle. Keep the photos with the s


Red flags to watch for when buying a used tube amp
A tube amp that looks fine can hide big problems. You can lose hundreds or end up with a noisy, dangerous amp if you skip checks. What’s going on Tube amps are loved for tone and feel. But their parts wear. Tubes, capacitors, sockets and wiring all age. That makes buying used a mix of chance and inspection. Why it matters You pay for sound and safety. A bad amp can sound thin, hum, or fail suddenly. Repairs can be costly. You want an amp that plays and is safe to use. Quick v


How to check a used mixer for noisy preamps and scratchy pots
Got hiss in a bargain mixer? That tiny noise can kill a session. Learn simple checks so you don’t buy a headache. What’s going on Mixers age in small, noisy ways. Preamps (the mic inputs that boost sound) can get noisy. Pots (the knobs) can get scratchy. Both make hiss, clicks, or channel dropouts. You can spot most problems in a few minutes with a phone, headphones, and a lead. Why it matters You can fix some problems, but repairs cost time and money. If you miss noisy pream


Do pawnshops deduct weight for stones and settings when buying gold jewelry?
Do shops deduct for stones and settings when buying gold jewelry? That short answer surprises people. How do shops price gold jewelry when buying it? Shops usually pay for the metal, not the gems or the craft. They test the metal to find its purity. Then they weigh the piece and pay based on the metal weight and current scrap price. The piece’s stones, solder, and setting often do not raise the metal payout. Will a diamond or other stone reduce the weight they pay for? Yes. M


Used tube amp: the red flags every player should spot
A common mistake is buying a tube amp because it looks cool, then finding out it's a money pit. You can avoid that by spotting a few clear red flags before you hand over cash. Myth vs fact: Tubes are fragile, so any amp with old tubes is bad Myth: Old tubes mean you must replace everything right away. Fact: Tubes age, but they don't always fail immediately. If the amp powers on, hums quietly, and the tone holds when you play, the tubes can be fine for a while. Ask how often t


How to price a used laptop for a quick sale
Think your laptop is worth more than buyers will pay? What matters most right now For a quick sale, buyers care about three things: condition, speed to use, and price. Condition means scratches, screen issues, keyboard wear, and battery life. Speed to use means the processor, RAM, and if it boots quickly. Price must match what similar machines sell for fast, not what you paid. How to check the basics fast Turn the machine on and watch boot time. Open a web browser and a docum


Do pawn shops buy platinum jewelry and how they price it vs gold
Think platinum is just a fancier silver? That mistake costs sellers time and money. Low-value pieces: what to expect If the item is thin, plated, or has lots of wear, price is low. Pawn shops look first at weight and purity. Solid platinum is heavy. If it looks light or peels, it may be plated or alloyed. Small rings, damaged chains, and worn settings usually fall in this tier. Shops pay less for low-value pieces because refining costs eat profit. You may get an offer well un


How to protect your instrument’s value: cases, care, and storage
You hand over a guitar to a buyer at a meetup. The buyer lifts it out of a soft gig bag and runs fingers along the neck. You notice a ding on the headstock and a sticky tuners knob. That small mark changes the price on the spot. Keep the case, keep receipts, clean before sale, control humidity, record serials, photograph all sides, avoid cheap fixes. Scene: a quick check at the counter You meet a buyer or the shop clerk and the instrument is set on the counter. They look at f


How pawn shops spot plated metal — quick myths and facts
That shiny necklace might be a bargain or a fake. You need to know which before you pay. Myth vs Fact: Hallmarks tell the whole story Myth: If a piece has a stamp like 10K or 14K it's definitely solid gold. Fact: Stamps are a good sign but not proof. Sellers can stamp plated items or rub off real marks. A stamp tells you to test more, not to stop testing. Myth vs Fact: The color test is enough Myth: Real gold keeps the same colour everywhere, so any colour change means plated




























