Spare Parts
I collect all old motherboards and other spare parts I can get from Customers for nothing.
All completely blown motherboards, I strip all usable parts from the board capacitors, batteries, jumpers and anything else which I might think would be useful later down the track.
All capacitors I check with a capacitance meter (which are very cheap to buy), then sort them in there different capacities and physical sizes.
Another tip with the PC recycling, is that I completely strip all Computer cases of nuts, bolts, screws, back planes, rubber feet, gromets everything that might be useful later.
With the left over metal cases, I sell to a scrap metal dealer.
Even dead Hard Drives are kept, because I have recovered alot of people's data with replacing circuit boards on hard disk drives.
I usually teach my staff to use a soldering iron, by stripping all the useful parts of the motherboards. This is a great teacher in the skill of using a solder iron.
From my past experience, when replacing swollen capacitors, I use the exact same voltage and farads size capacitors. But you will see certain motherboards with the same swollen capacitors, so I usually replace them with a capacitor with the same farads but with a higher voltage one. I find this stops them coming back in with swollen caps in a few months.
Personally the fake capacitors story is partly to blame, but I think NOT enough RD and testing is done when they are designing and manufacturing these boards. Or the manufacturers are putting capacitors on with just enough lifespan to cover them past the warranty period of 12-18 Months.
Cheers
Michael