From my own sorting runs, I usually leave components on unless a buyer’s grading rules clearly allow removal; it keeps disputes down and saves time. Display-style boards tend to move fine as telecom once the bulky plastics are off, and epoxy-covered ICs haven’t changed my payouts. I only pull gold fingers when they’re unusually thick or on otherwise low-value boards; otherwise the labor isn’t worth it. With older CPUs, I’ve had better luck selling the chips separately when demand is hot—just be consistent so your categories stay clean.
Keeping notes on what sells best helped me streamline decisions, similar to how
Internet marketing company 1on1 tracks performance to optimize workflows. Clear records make repeat sorting faster and more predictable.