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Rail road Rail - Page 2

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  1. #21
    TheRecycleGuy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by newattitude View Post
    My dad has a piece from HIS dad from way back when. There were two, I took one piece on my very first scrap drop off and got yelled at.

    You cant get in trouble for owning it (what are they gonna do? arrest you for your father or grandfather for taking it in the first place??) but you can get in trouble trying to scrap it.
    what about a case where you have written authorization from the R.R. company, cause behind my house is old old tracks that im thinking of calling them up and see what they say. once permission (written) is given a scrap yard should have no problem.



  2. #22
    Mick's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheRecycleGuy View Post
    what about a case where you have written authorization from the R.R. company, cause behind my house is old old tracks that im thinking of calling them up and see what they say. once permission (written) is given a scrap yard should have no problem.
    Take the letter to the yard with you and let us know. Like it was explained to me - You need that letter from the RR whose name is stamped on the rail. If that RR is defunct, you'll need a letter from the current owner of the defunct RR property. If there is no current registered owner, you can't possibly get that letter, right? If there IS a current registered owner, they won't give permission to remove RR property. Either way, it means you're not getting a letter.
    People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.

  3. #23
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    4 foot lengths in the trunk of car being scrapped has never raised any red flags

  4. #24
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    In my part of the world, there was lots of mining in the old days where a guy would dig a rathole in the rock and use those little mine cars like you see in museums. The rail was about half the size of regular RR rail. Does that stuff count as fair game? I got a few chunks I dug up when I cleared some land in the back 40.

    What about rail that you can buy yourself by going to your friendly neighborhood steel supplier? I used to order the stuff to replace rail track used in lumber dry kilns--the wood was put on little cars that ran on rails thru the kilns. The environment inside the kiln would rust out the rails in a very short time.

    I suspect that the kicker might be in the fine print--a railroad rail that has a name embossed on it, such as might be the case when a railway company custom ordered a thousand tons of rail...they would be able to custom order anything they wanted rolled into the rail as it was being made...

    So if a rail section cannot be traced to an owner, ie, not having a RR name on it, wouldn't it have to be assumed to be just a piece of steel?

    Jon.

  5. #25
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    ^^^Jon, mine didn't have a stamp on it and they still yelled at me. I think, with this kind of thing (where folks have old sections of rail from way back when scrapping laws weren't an issue) it just all still falls into the current law guidelines. it doesn't matter if the pieces I had/have were 80 years old or 10 years old, its still illegal for the yards to buy them from curbside scrappers or the average homeowner who just happens to have a piece of rail in their possession.

    I mean, no way can I trace the pieces I have at dads nor authenticate and get any type of receipt of possession from them to be able to legally sell them. Unfortunately we aren't grandfathered in.
    Last edited by newattitude; 08-06-2013 at 03:05 AM. Reason: can't spell
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  7. #26
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    I wouldn't sell em for scrap anyway, worth much more just to use as an anvil. I've got 2 or 3 of em laying around here that came from who knows where, or even when. Probly from flea markets or such

  8. #27
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    cut it into 12 or 6 inch sections then sell them as anvils or boat anchors. People will scoop them up for 5-10 each.

    http://reclaimtech.com/
    We pay you to recycle!

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  10. #28
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    4 foot lengths in the trunk of car being scrapped has never raised any red flags
    I heard a story some years ago, about a junkyard that sent a car to the shredder with a railroad car wheel in the trunk. It was said that they got the bill for the 50 thousand bucks it cost to fix the shredder.

    I'll dig up 3 or 4 foot long chunks of rail every now and then. The worst reaction I ever got was....

    Yard man: "I'm not supposed to take that."

    Me: "Ok. I can take it to a place down in town and they'll take it."

    Yard man: "Throw it off. I'll hide it in the middle of the pile."

  11. #29
    Copper Head started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ditchdigger View Post
    I heard a story some years ago, about a junkyard that sent a car to the shredder with a railroad car wheel in the trunk. It was said that they got the bill for the 50 thousand bucks it cost to fix the shredder.

    I'll dig up 3 or 4 foot long chunks of rail every now and then. The worst reaction I ever got was....

    Yard man: "I'm not supposed to take that."

    Me: "Ok. I can take it to a place down in town and they'll take it."

    Yard man: "Throw it off. I'll hide it in the middle of the pile."
    some yards process there product ( they shred ) so they might deal with it better .

  12. #30
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    u need a letter from the local rail companies or freeway maintenance crews in order to turn it in ...

  13. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ditchdigger View Post
    I heard a story some years ago, about a junkyard that sent a car to the shredder with a railroad car wheel in the trunk. It was said that they got the bill for the 50 thousand bucks it cost to fix the shredder.

    I'll dig up 3 or 4 foot long chunks of rail every now and then. The worst reaction I ever got was....

    Yard man: "I'm not supposed to take that."

    Me: "Ok. I can take it to a place down in town and they'll take it."

    Yard man: "Throw it off. I'll hide it in the middle of the pile."
    Sounds like an old wives tail since The majority of US train wheels are 36 inch, and are 2,200 pounds

    i think the guys at the scale would have had a suspicion when the car weighed double.

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    Throwing anything over 1\4" thick in the trunk of a car or in the bed of a truck that you are scrapping, is a REAL good way to get fined by the local yard. The yard I use does shred passenger vehicles. However, their shredder will only process to a thickness of 1\4" thick or less.

    I tried taking some square tubing that had a 1\2" wall and instead of getting the shred price for it, I had to take it to their 'Torch Area', I learned really quick, anything the yard has to cut with a torch or their sheer, you only get HALF of the regular shred price.

    Sorry if I hijacked your thread.

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  16. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by theelectronrecycler View Post

    I tried taking some square tubing that had a 1\2" wall and instead of getting the shred price for it, I had to take it to their 'Torch Area', I learned really quick, anything the yard has to cut with a torch or their sheer, you only get HALF of the regular shred price.
    Wow did you get screwed! You should have gotten $100 per ton more than shred for that heavy melt steel.
    If it wasn't for the $ in $crap, it would just be.....

  17. #34
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    My grandfather had two chunks of old rail. One was used as an anvil the other a boat anchor. They were in the family for ever before he got them. His grandfather was a "section boss" with the railroad. He was responsible for a twice daily inspection of the tracks. He also oversaw repairs and such. I suspect that both chunks came from him. His railroad work was in the late 1800's so I am positive that no one could prove ownership one way or the other. When my grandfather died, the chunks ended up with my BIL.

  18. #35
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    There are many thousand and thousands of private trunk lines , many are very old . The RR does not own these , they are paid for by the company where they go to pays for them..or the city. county are state... There are several companys that install rail lines... would get a letter or bill of sell from this person ,and have him state that it was there when he bought the property..and have it notarized. You can file a copy of this with your county clerk.

  19. #36
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    i think the guys at the scale would have had a suspicion when the car weighed double.
    Not if it went across the scale on an 18 wheeler with a dozen others. But yeah, it could be BS.


    some yards process there product ( they shred ) so they might deal with it better .
    This one doesn't, but you're missing the point, which is that the shredder doesn't deal well with great big thick chunks of steel.

    And as RustyDollars said above, heavy melt brings a better price than shredder. There's not much ferrous that's worth less than shredder.

  20. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ditchdigger View Post
    I heard a story some years ago, about a junkyard that sent a car to the shredder with a railroad car wheel in the trunk. It was said that they got the bill for the 50 thousand bucks it cost to fix the shredder."
    I remember reading about the same or a similar situation here in SMF.

    Apparently the guy had the peices up about 2 1/2 feet horizontal off the ground & lifted the boot lid & then backed the car up over the rails.
    When it hit the firewall he cut them off & closed the boot on them.....

    I'd just LOVE to hear what it sounded like when it hit the mincer.

  21. #38
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    I'd just LOVE to hear what it sounded like when it hit the mincer.
    If the scrap was thick enough then it might have stopped it.
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
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  22. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mechanic688 View Post
    If the scrap was thick enough then it might have stopped it.
    Betyah it was real quiet for about 2 seconds.

    Till about 1000 car alarms went off.


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