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Floppy question

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  1. #1
    carolinajunkman started this thread.
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    Floppy question

    I do not have a local buyer for boards. I've been hoarding hard drives and floppy drive to sell whole somewhere eventually. I've now started to break them down to sell the steel locally. My question is, is there anything in a floppy besides the main board, that warrant further break down. I will ship the boards when I get enough. I was going to throw the rest in with shred. Your opinions wanted. Thanks.


  2. #2
    ryanw's Avatar
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    If you feel like it, the motors are pretty easy to remove...they barely weight anything though.

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    Mudlucky's Avatar
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    I pull the motor on the back of the floppy drives. I also actually pop the back off if there are just 3 or 4 screws and then, if I can get it with a couple of screws, I pull the motor on the inside and throw it into copper breakage as well. My yard pays copper breakage for them which is about 25cents a pound. I take in a 5 gallon bucket at a time. I fill up a bucket in about a week to 10 days. It weighs about 25 to 30 pounds when I take it in. (side note, my yard also buys fans at copper breakage and I don't have to break off any plastic. unscrew the fans from desktops, clip the wire, fan into the copper breakage bin.) The same is true for DVD/CD roms. If they are DVDRW drives and they work, I ship them to PTScrapper here on the forum.



    For the hard drives, I actually break them all the way down if they are small drives or broken drives. (If they are larger and work, I send them to Terry as well. Well, and the occasional bad drive.) You have some stainless, some aluminum, the platters and the magnets. You even get some gold mylar. There is zero waste in a hard drive. The small bits of plastic in them have metal attached to it so I throw it in shred or, if I can get the plastic off, I throw it in stainless. The covers are stainless most of the time, but sometimes they have metal coverings you have to pull off, or else just throw it in shred. The screws are sometimes non-magnetic stainless as well. Watch out for those The magnetic screws go into my shred 5 gallon bucket for screws. And...the spacers between the platters are either stainless, shred or aluminum depending on the hard drive.

    Oh, and I know that the drives in the end don't pay a lot, but I get my two boys to sit around a table with me and we talk while we dismantle the drives. They get a kick out of using the power screwdrivers and I get time to talk to my boys. It is a win win.

    Good luck. If anyone sees something I'm missing, please let me know.

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  5. #4
    carolinajunkman started this thread.
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    Thanks a lot guys. Last question, on the hard drives, what is the disc itself?

  6. #5
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    Platinum coated Aluminum. About 1.00 a Lb.

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    I just pull the motor off the back with the brass worm screw and pull the board off. The rest goes in the shred pile for me.

    The hard drive disks are the CD looking plates. They are aluminum with a very thin platinum plating on them. I tie them to a string and use them scare birds away from my tomatoes and blackberries.
    Last edited by Gravitar; 07-08-2013 at 01:32 PM.
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    Some just take a flat bar or chisel and pop the connector with the gold pins off the back side and toss the rest into shred. I've been doing the same actually, might reconsider, but thinking there's only a low grade brown board inside, and don't really see a tiny motor worth the time to go in there after

  10. #8
    Sirscrapalot's Avatar
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    As others above...

    Board and motor, and if 3.5 drives I grab those connectors on the board, rest goes to shred.

    The motors may be light when single but they do add up fast if you have a good supply.

    That's my .25 cents, and yes I want my change!

    Goodluck!

    Sirscrapalot - Still has ten fingers after exploding things all weekend.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sirscrapalot View Post
    As others above...

    Board and motor, and if 3.5 drives I grab those connectors on the board, rest goes to shred.

    .
    Does this mean your 3.5 floppy don't get tore down, other than remove the connector?

  12. #10
    Sirscrapalot's Avatar
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    Oh I break it down to the board, remove the board, then the connector. Easier for my fat fingers to get to. LOL.

    If I remember later I'll break one down when I'm in the shop an take some pics of how I do it. Maybe it'll help someone!

    Sirscrapalot - Being helpful and confusing all in one post..go me!

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    I've been sticking a wide chisel into the end, under the board, and just pry till the connector breaks off from the board, without removing the board or any covers/screws

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  15. #12
    Sirscrapalot's Avatar
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    Hrrm, I will try that later. The good lord knows if I don't have to deal with a bunch of screws I'ma happy scrapper.

    Sirscrapalot - Learning something new everyday is a good thing.

  16. #13
    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    I pull the boards which might allow you to pry the center motor off. The other motor is on the back end (2 screws) and has a gear that is either brass or SS. I use a bolt cutter to snap them off. The top cover is just tin.

    Then look at the chassis, certain ones are die cast and you definitely can see the difference in color and texture. Those go in my die cast bucket. I break the pins off the back and the rest of the board goes in my low grade box. Rarely I'll find a double green board and those
    go in my mid-grade box. (because of the baby chips)

    If the center motor is attached to a small metal square plate, the whole thing goes into the motor bucket.
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    Quote Originally Posted by greytruck View Post
    Platinum coated Aluminum. About 1.00 a Lb.
    Actually, we have a buyer on this forum that is paying $2 per pound.
    "64K should be enough for anybody." - Bill Gates 1981
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  20. #15
    carolinajunkman started this thread.
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    Thanks guys. The ones I did today all had a dbl green board. I got it and the motor. If not for that board, I wouldn't have thought about breaking down at all. Thanks for all the info.

  21. #16
    carolinajunkman started this thread.
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    Sorry guys. I was confusing DVD with floppy. Broke a bunch down today very efficiently with your advice. Thanks

  22. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mechanic688 View Post
    I pull the boards which might allow you to pry the center motor off. The other motor is on the back end (2 screws) and has a gear that is either brass or SS. I use a bolt cutter to snap them off. The top cover is just tin.

    Then look at the chassis, certain ones are die cast and you definitely can see the difference in color and texture. Those go in my die cast bucket. I break the pins off the back and the rest of the board goes in my low grade box. Rarely I'll find a double green board and those
    go in my mid-grade box. (because of the baby chips)

    If the center motor is attached to a small metal square plate, the whole thing goes into the motor bucket.
    Okay... You lost me there. I don't know what "baby chips" are. Care to elaborate?

  23. #18
    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by billygoat View Post
    Okay... You lost me there. I don't know what "baby chips" are. Care to elaborate?
    See the small ones, those are baby chips,,,,lol


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    Quote Originally Posted by carolinajunkman View Post
    Sorry guys. I was confusing DVD with floppy.
    ohhh, yeah, haha, I do that a lot! ; )

  25. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mechanic688 View Post
    See the small ones, those are baby chips,,,,lol
    Ah, okay. Thought you were maybe talking about those teensy-weensy little resistors often seen on the back of boards.


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