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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Jowi Morales

$20,000 in 32GB RAM sticks saved from the dumpster are now worth a fortune — seventy-two DDR4-2666 ECC RDIMMs were about to turn into e-waste

72 32GB HPE DDR4-2666 ECC RDIMMs.

An employee saved 72 RAM sticks headed for the dumpster after their company’s new servers received a memory upgrade in 2024, as soon as they arrived. According to the Reddit poster, these memory modules were about to be turned into e-waste, so their father took them instead and gave the components to the poster.

While we cannot find an HP Enterprise module on Amazon, a similar memory module from SK hynix is currently priced at $287.95, meaning those 72 RAM sticks are valued at more than $20,000. When we checked CamelCamelCamel for the historical pricing of these components, they were approximately $35 in 2024, with a low of $29.02 in mid-2025.

This might seem like a massive waste for many enthusiasts, especially given the outrageous pricing that RAM has hit this year due to the massive demand for memory chips driven by the AI infrastructure build-out. However, other commenters on the Reddit post pointed out that many corporations don’t care about what happens to their old equipment. After all, once they’ve been depreciated, then they already have zero value, at least in their books.

pcmasterrace from r/pcmasterrace/comments/1sod8mr/2_years_ago_my_dads_company_bought_new_servers

“In many places where I worked, the sysadmins in charge of the servers were not hardware enthusiasts, had never built their own machines, and did not care what things cost as long as the infrastructure kept running,” ArcticCelt said under the post. “They constantly did things like that, throwing away perfectly good equipment instead of keeping it for test labs or anything useful. It was their budget to spend, and they simply did not give ------ because no one above them understood how any of it worked.”

Unfortunately, registered memory like this isn't supported by consumer-grade hardware, so the Redditor won’t be able to use it to upgrade their computer. These types of memory modules require server and HEDT motherboards and the corresponding CPU, like Intel Xeon and AMD EPYC chips. So, unless the original poster or their dad has a specialized build tucked away in their basement, their only option would be to resell these kits on the used market. Although we don’t expect these chips to fetch more than $20,000 on the used market, they could still probably sell them for more than the price of one of the best gaming PCs of 2026.

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