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ARC Raiders Repair vs Recycle Guide: How To Manage Resources And Maximize Profits?

Posted: Nov 24, 2025 Views: 63

Posted: Nov 24, 2025

Source:  IGGM

Views: 63

While ARC Raiders is a typical shooter, its rich crafting and loot systems make item collection an indispensable part of exploring the surface world for almost every player.

ARC Raiders offers a wealth of resources and materials to farm for upgrading and crafting every item in the game, but most loot drops are completely random. This means you might have a large inventory of basic materials that aren't exactly what you need right now.

If you frequently face this dilemma of lacking necessary equipment and resources, this guide might be helpful. We'll share how to recycle, repair, and recraft equipment in ARC Raiders to help you better manage every resource you have.

ARC Raiders Repair vs Recycle Guide: How To Manage Resources And Maximize Profits?

Salvaging Or Recycling

First, let's start with some basic resource management tips.

We want to emphasize that while you can recycle items during raids, the consequences are far less favorable than recycling within Speranza, as this action within the instance is actually marked as salvaging, not recycling. Therefore, the best practice is to take the items out, return them to your base, and then recycle them there. This applies to all ARC Raiders items in the game.

To be clear, you should only salvage items if you're completely out of inventory space and want to continue looting. However, if you do this, the value of the items will be lost very quickly.

A good example is Ruined Accordion. If you salvage it during a raid, you'll only get a bunch of Plastic Parts and nothing else. But if you take it back to Speranza for recycling, it will not only provide more Plastic Parts but also give you three Steel Springs.

So, if you disenchant a Ruined Accordion during a raid, you'll miss out on three whole Steel Springs, a high-value resource for crafting various late-game useful items.

This means that if you want to maximize your loot gains, you must know which items are most worth keeping and recycling, which items can be salvaged immediately to save space, and which items are worth selling? It's worth noting that if you intend to sell items, recycling them is almost never worthwhile.

To reiterate, if you want more ARC Raiders coins, sell items directly. Recycling won't earn you more money, and crafting new items and reselling them isn't worth it. Therefore, if you just want coins, sell the raw materials you find.

Item Durability

Before discussing the recycling value of equipment, we must understand a key item mechanic in ARC Raiders: durability.

In the game, an item's durability directly affects its value; the higher the durability, the higher the item's value.

For example, with Hullcracker, at the same item level, if your weapon has 0 durability (out of 100), it might only be worth 1000 coins, but if it has 100 durability, it could be worth 10,000 coins.

However, durability and item value do not scale in a 1:1 ratio. In fact, the lower the durability, the smaller the decrease in value; and vice versa. In other words, while your Hullcracker's value won't immediately plummet from 10,000 gold to 1,000, its value will be significantly reduced once it's broken.

Therefore, for most items, whether you plan to sell them directly, repair them, or recraft them, the item's current durability is a crucial factor influencing your decision.

Repair Or Recraft

Now, we come to a topic that causes much hesitation among players: should we repair or recycle and recraft a piece of equipment? Many players make the mistake of repairing any equipment they want to use without considering the cost, the benefits gained, or the durability loss during raids.

Next, we'll discuss this issue from three different item categories: Shields, Augments, and Weapons. We'll provide some general rules of thumb and suggestions, but your actual actions will depend on your personal resources.

Shields

Let's start with shields. They're a good example because repairing them requires ARC Circuitry and Batteries.

However, if you recycle the same item, you'll get an ARC Circuitry. Recreating a brand new item like this requires one ARC Circuitry and four batteries.

Therefore, if you recycle it and craft a new one, the only real cost is batteries, just in greater quantities. Since ARC Circuitry is generally rarer than batteries, recycling and crafting is usually more cost-effective.

The situation is different if you have a lot of ARC Circuitry but lack batteries.

However, in almost all cases, if an item is damaged to the point of requiring two repairs to restore full durability, then recycling and crafting is clearly more cost-effective. This is because if you die with an item at full durability, your invested resources are immediately lost, and the risk is greater.

All things considered, recycling a shield and crafting a new one is likely more cost-effective than repairing it twice. But if you only repair it once and then face a high risk of losing it in the next raid, your loss is far less than crafting a brand new shield.

Therefore, the level of risk you anticipate and your planned activities are important considerations when deciding whether to repair or recycle an item.

ARC Raiders Weapons Free Giveaways

Augments

For augments, the most important thing to note is their durability loss mechanism. 

Normally, augments do not lose durability at the end of raids, nor when a player respawns after being downed. Even if a player exits a raid while downed, the item's durability will not decrease. The only way an augment's durability will decrease is when the user dies. This means that unless an augment's durability reaches zero, there is absolutely no need to repair it.

Even if it has very little durability left, there's no need to repair it, because as long as the augment is still usable, it won't break while you're wearing it until you die. Even if it does break, the only person affected is the player who picked it up.

Repairing it after it has exceeded minimum durability will only benefit the player who picked it up. So, never repair it. Therefore, the handling of augments is simpler than that of most other items.

Repairing an augment requires one Advanced Electrical Component and two Processors. Recycling the same augment yields one Advanced Electrical Component and one Processor. Crafting a completely new augment requires two Advanced Electrical Components and three Processors.

Therefore, if we consider the discounts on recycled parts, the cost of repairing an augment is actually exactly the same as crafting a brand new augment with full durability, while the cost of repairing only restores half of the durability.

Therefore, if you have the blueprint for an augment you want to use, never repair it; always recycle it and craft a new one.

Weapons

Finally, we'll discuss weapons, which are the most complex for various reasons.

First, weapons have upgrade levels, which need to be considered. It's important to note that higher upgrade levels require more materials to repair, so repair costs are directly related to upgrade levels.

The most important implication of understanding this is: never upgrade a weapon before repairing it. If you intend to repair and upgrade simultaneously, repair the weapon first, then upgrade; otherwise, you'll only waste your ARC Raiders materials.

Furthermore, it's worth noting that upgrading weapons not only increases their maximum durability but also reduces the rate at which durability depletes during firing.

Weapon durability loss primarily comes from two aspects: first, when a player dies, the weapon loses a significant amount of durability, just like other items. Therefore, guns looted from other players are usually severely damaged or even unusable. Second, actually firing the weapon also consumes durability.

Each weapon has its own durability value, determining how many bullets can be fired per unit of durability lost.

However, this doesn't mean that keeping your guns at high durability is always a good thing. Increasing the durability of any weapon above 15 increases the risk of losing materials upon death.

For example, at level 1, Pharaoh gun loses approximately 1 point of durability every 2.3 bullets fired. At level 4, this value allows you to fire 2.5 bullets. Assuming we use a level 1 weapon, this means that 15 points of durability equates to 34.5 bullets before the gun breaks.

If you're only playing to farm gear, how often will you actually fire that many bullets with Pharaoh?

What I mean is that for the vast majority of raids you'll do in the game, you won't need weapons with more than 15 durability points. Therefore, you shouldn't repair them before their durability drops below the minimum. Because if you repair them and still die in the raid, you're just wasting those materials, essentially giving them to the person who killed you.

Now, let's talk about weapon repair and recycling. Of course, the situation is slightly different for each weapon, so we'll just use a popular weapon as an example for your reference, such as the Venator, which has been very popular since the 1.3.0 patch update.

Repairing a Ventor 4 requires three Advanced Mechanical Components and three Medium Gun Parts. Recycling a Ventor 4 will give you three Medium Gun Parts and three Medium Gun Parts.

Next, crafting a brand new Ventor requires two Advanced Mechanical Components, three Medium Gun Parts, and five Magnets. Then, upgrading it to level 4 requires a total of four Advanced Mechanical Components and six Medium Gun Parts.

This means that if you recycle a Ventor 4, then build a brand new one and fully upgrade it, your total cost, after deducting the materials obtained from recycling, is three Advanced Mechanical Components, six Medium Gun Parts, and five Magnets.

In contrast, repairing a damaged Ventor 4 requires six Advanced Mechanical Components and six Medium Gun Parts.

So, essentially, if you recycle and build a brand new Ventor 4, you save three Advanced Mechanical Components, but it still costs an extra five Magnets. Is it worthwhile? Honestly, it depends on your individual resources.

In short, understanding when to repair, recycle, and craft new items is crucial for better managing all your resources in the game, reducing resource gathering time, and allowing you to spend more time enjoying the thrill of raids.

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