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First time taking in steel/tin/shred

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    DWJ started this thread.
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    First time taking in steel/tin/shred

    While I've been scrapping non-ferrous for many years(20+), tomorrow will be the first load of "shred/tin/light iron" that I've ever brought in to a scrap yard. I've got four barrels of nothing but bandsaw and sawzall blades that weigh around 3100 lbs total. Called my local yard on Tuesday and they said $135 per ton. I'm looking forward to breaking this ice.



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    waredu's Avatar
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    Band saw blades and sawzall blades aren't tin. Most are L6 steel - which has a relatively high nickel content. Have the yard hit it with a gun - you might be pleasantly surprised.

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    Do you know what kind of gun he's referring to DWJ? Some yards won't have them, you might should call around and ask

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    DWJ started this thread.
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    I'm guessing you are referring to an XRF analyzer. Funny thing is, when I first found this forum, I asked about this and the responses I got treated me like a real a**hole.
    Last edited by DWJ; 07-04-2012 at 09:23 PM.

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    I've got another five barrels of "shred" from the computers I've been breaking down, maybe 1500 lbs. A lot less weight than my "blade barrells" but I think these will now be my first run of ferrous to the yard, I know this is all plain metal. Thank you all for helping me with grading possibilities!

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    i've never seen or used one either, i've only seen them talk about em

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    Quote Originally Posted by DWJ View Post
    I've got another five barrels of "shred" from the computers I've been breaking down, maybe 1500 lbs. A lot less weight than my "blade barrells" but I think these will now be my first run of ferrous to the yard, I know this is all plain metal. Thank you all for helping me with grading possibilities!
    Double check those tower carcasses, a few towers that I got recently were actually aluminum. They usually are used to make computers for people that are into gaming. I actually got one that had a small fish tank built into it.
    I won't be wronged. I won't be insulted. I won't be laid a-hand on. I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.” John Wayne-- The Shootist

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    Quote Originally Posted by DWJ View Post
    I've got another five barrels of "shred" from the computers I've been breaking down, maybe 1500 lbs. A lot less weight than my "blade barrells" but I think these will now be my first run of ferrous to the yard, I know this is all plain metal. Thank you all for helping me with grading possibilities!
    I just took about 1300 lbs of stripped towers to my very local yard the other week. It was labeled by them as "light iron" and I came away with $115 @ .09 lb.

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    DWJ started this thread.
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    Called several yards after the holiday regarding the high nickel steel. First one said no thanks, second one said they're not interested unless I had 5+ tons, third yard said I'd need over 10tons for them to be into it. The guy I talked to at the third yard, asked me a lot of questions about the material I had and put me in touch with a friend of his,who buys used industrial equipment. After talking to him for a while and a couple of pictures of the rusted coils, we agreed upon a price of $600 for 32 coils of the bandsaw blade. His guys came by today, handed me 6 benjamins and left with the coils. 32 coils of blade @48 lb. each =1536 lbs. 1536 lbs/$600=$0.39/pound or $780/ton. Thank you Waredu for getting me started on this journey!

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    DWJ started this thread.
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    Also, on Friday I took in my first load of non-ferrous to my local yard. I had 1760 lbs. @ $130/ton for $114.40. I don't know why I was intimidated about going to a steel yard, it was as easy as I could've imagined. Drive in, weigh, go where they told me, dump, drive out, weigh again, get paid and go home. Now I'm ready to do this over and over and over!

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    Quote Originally Posted by DWJ View Post
    Called several yards after the holiday regarding the high nickel steel. First one said no thanks, second one said they're not interested unless I had 5+ tons, third yard said I'd need over 10tons for them to be into it. The guy I talked to at the third yard, asked me a lot of questions about the material I had and put me in touch with a friend of his,who buys used industrial equipment. After talking to him for a while and a couple of pictures of the rusted coils, we agreed upon a price of $600 for 32 coils of the bandsaw blade. His guys came by today, handed me 6 benjamins and left with the coils. 32 coils of blade @48 lb. each =1536 lbs. 1536 lbs/$600=$0.39/pound or $780/ton. Thank you Waredu for getting me started on this journey!
    Glad that worked out as well as it did - $780/ton is a lot better than the $160/ton I just got on a load of computer carcasses I just took in.

    What I usually do if I am not 100% sure of what I have metalwise is google it. I knew band saw blades weren't just regular steel from having sold them years ago. So I googled "band saw blade composition". The first few links took me to a couple of manufacturers that described what metal they used. I had to do the same thing with the submersible pumps I get - turns out they're made out of stainless steel.

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    Volume makes a big difference before you sell as shred. Thanks for the reminder to everyone here.

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    how in hek do you fit computer towers in a barrel?

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    Bear, it requires an 8 lb. sledgehammer, a six-pack, and a little bit of energy!

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