Yes. You can remove socketed chips. In this case that card is unlikely to get gold finger card. So the debate is if removing the gold chip is better than high peripheral rate and clean gold fingers.
Yes high telco
These are one of the board types discussed at length including input from Chris directly. In this case, a gold finger card, this would be low grade. Remove the metal shields for high grade clean. It’s not telco, but GFC class. I’m confident on this board’s placement as I know the layout.
This is clear cut high telco. Removing the processor won’t change that. I’d also remove the little flash chip in the corner.
The general rules about removing, it’s usually good to remove socketed chips. The only place you need to reconsider that is high telco. Where the debate is chip weight for individual chips. And what the limit of pulling is for being a reduced level. Removing ceramic chips greatly reduces the weight, but even nickel pin ceramics are worth more than high telco from a scrap point. And yes, those 486 chips still sell well when they work. I alway pull 890, 960, and 990 chips as well and some sun chips. Apple is another where it’s often better for an experienced tech to desolder working chips from PPC and earlier boards. Same with spark station compatibles.
But now we’re wondering away from your questions. In your case with you thinking of online sale, again, I’d pull the flash chip too. Good $5-$10 for them. Or if you have a programmer blank it for $20. These are popular on mini-board systems like Rpie
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