how old were you when you found your first item and what was the nastiest one yet or the beste
how old were you when you found your first item and what was the nastiest one yet or the beste
I think i was 27 when i became a "scrapper". first items were air ducts and a fuse box.
Nastyest item was a 5ft cast iron lamp. Got to the gas station and saw what I thought was dogdoo all over the base like its been going there for years. Luckly it was frozen so i picked it up from the post and unscrewed the base using the cord to turn it, threw it in the garbage can there.
Best find at curb co. was a copy,fax,scanner machine. probobly 350 to 400 lbs.
First thing, cant remember, used to pick up cans with my grandfather when I was a little kid.
Nastiest, had to be a microwave/range hood combo, those things can get disgusting.
Best thing, to many to list, but this time I will go with 7 rolls of silver dimes and 2 $50 bills in old suitcases.
My fortune cookie said:
You discover treasures where others see nothing unusual.
I was 7-8 years old picking up cans on my road, setting right in the middle of the road was a folding Allen Pak. I had no idea what it was but when I gave it to my dad it sure made him happy
expect the worst and hope for the best
cory couch
c & c recycling
JUNKERS AND CLUNKERS
(870) 897-6484
The best thing for me was a compound bow. Cant wait to take it to the range this spring and take lessons
Lol I was told to scrap but knew nothing. I said I charge for that! They said I would get paid to toss it (a fridge or other from a business) I was a parts driver or medical driver or other driver jobs using a pick up truck . I was like no $ no haul . Even stuff I disassemble today lol. I always think ......i used to pass this up. No more . Gimme more. I'm down now.
Last edited by blacksteel; 03-24-2014 at 07:07 PM.
Worst .....a fridge or freezer with dead ducks or geese and deer.
Off the top of my head. I'm sure there's worse.
At the dump with my grandfather, climbing over stuff and I was standing on a dead cow!
Well, I just found what's probably the coolest thing I ever found scrappin':
A cell phone in the street.
Big deal? Well, there's more. I was loading my truck with a couple prom dresses my wife wanted me to take to the thrift store I get scrap from every day. So I set my phone down on the truck's bedrail ""for just a sec"" while I opened the door with one hand, holding the box with the other hand. So I set the box in the truck and rearranged a couple things and the box fell and I had to pick it up and yaddayaddayadda... so I got in the truck & took off.
Now, like yall, I always keep my eyes peeled when driving, so I'm almost back home, and right by the turn-in for my alley, I spotted something in the road. ....Hmmmmmm.... looks like a cellphone..... Hmmmmmmm..... looks like..... HOLY $#!+ it IS my cellphone!!!!
Whew!
It's fine. Couple scratches on the tuff-cover thingy, but all-in-all good shape.
Out of clutter, find simplicity. --Albert Einstein
worst thing i found was a like lamp post with coon crap and stuff on it and a dead rotting rat
First thing - pop bottles in LA. I use to walk the road sides collecting them for Icees. Don't know if this was scrapping, but it helped me keep my eyes open. Best - First farm scrap job. Still working on it today and my son will have to finish it. Worst - grain bin full of rotten grain. Full of explosive gas from the grain. I will post the solution to this challenge someday.
The first thing that I officially scrapped was my old BBQ pit, the one with the brass burners. (I have a thread about that. ) Hmmmmm the nastiest thing I've ever found was probably that BBQ full of rats from a few weeks back or the computers I get from one of my contacts. Every single one of them is full of this dirt that sticks to EVERYTHING and is impossible to clean up all the way. I've been lucky so far, I haven't had to deal with a stinky fridge full of food yet. Dealing with nasty stuff is just another day on the job, I'm not too scared about that stuff.
Made in China, Recycled in the Republic of Texas!
"When the mind fails, brute force prevails" - CTSSolutions
First haul: Old radiator and some copper pipes, when I was 16.
Nastiest haul: I've hauled lots of nasty stuff; fridges can get pretty putrid/covered in mold and rotten food particles.
Best non ferrous haul: Copper buss bars- that got me into scrapping seriously about 10 years ago. Netted 300 lbs of copper and 100 lbs of aluminum. Only needed about 5 buckets (wish I took picts)
Bulkiest haul: almost 30 large appliances at once
Heaviest ferrous haul: 7860 pound of steel shelving and rotating libraries over 8 ft tall (showed in my pict)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Junk-...25918997574928
www.JUNKBUTLERLLC.COM
CHICAGO, IL 855-CALLJUNK
first thing was a water cooler, was getting laid off for2 weeks last Christmas, and that's how I actually found this site and got into e waste. nastiest thing was a black box beside a dumpster, thought it was a cable or tool box or something, until I googled the name and found out it was a rodent trap haha
Not the first but in the beginning of posting adds on Craigslist I got a call for a dishwasher and almost passed but figured it was better then waiting for the next call. Before I got there they called back to see what else I could take...anything metal, anything that plugs in.
When I got there they had a pile with car batteries, wire, dishwasher(stainless tub!) and small kitchen appliances including this. (Set the hook in the wife's mouth for good)
Recyclable Material Merchant Wholesaler
Certified Zip-Tie Mechanic
"Give them enough so they can do something with it, but not too much that they won't do nothing."
An that's how you get the wife on your side when it comes to what we do...nifty things they'd never buy, or buying them said nifty things, or dinner. Ha ha!
Mine went with me to the yard when I first started, I won't take her back, she keeps trying to claim ALL the profit!
Sirscrapalot - All discarded lovers should be given a second chance, but with somebody else. - Mae West
young, 7 or 8 my sister and I used to find old dump sites in the woods and bring dad home oilcans, butter churns, electric knobs and other metal doodads, mom got the glass jars, some are worth money now.
The nastiest had to be the fryer oil furnace, every inch coated in grease, all the copper lines were full of old grease and the catch pan had a sorta biology experiment look too it.
I threw the copper line into the sun to get the old grease out.. When i went to pick them up later the smell from 15 ft away was making me gag something fierce.
My stomach is turning just typing about it.
There ain't nothing wrong with an honest days work. Anyone who says otherwise is a fool.- Old Man
I wasn't actually scrapping, but I remember breaking a line to an old refrig unit that used amonia in those days. Didn't take me long to vacate the premises. My dad had alot of that old meat processing/storing equip in a building. Wish I had it today..
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