I like brass a lot!!! My yard is paying about 2/3 for brass what they pay for copper. Brass is heavier by volume so I love a bucket of brass fittings!
Copper plumbing with easily removed brass fittings is a really cool win - win.
I like brass a lot!!! My yard is paying about 2/3 for brass what they pay for copper. Brass is heavier by volume so I love a bucket of brass fittings!
Copper plumbing with easily removed brass fittings is a really cool win - win.
all these metals are usually machined by carbide. carbide is the only metal we deal with, we are located in greenville sc and within an hours drive sized area we get about 20,000 to 30,000 pounds a week. We just got back from a trade show and while standing in the booth about 50 people an hour told us they have been just throwing it away for years.
Get the best prices for your scrap carbide http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...-tungsten.html
It's painful to me too. Right now though, scrapping is a hobby. I don't rely on the income at all. Every once in a while I make a run or send some boards to an e-scrapper, but for the most part it gives me something to do in my spare time, and I can stack copper and some aluminum in the process. I hate to do it, but maybe I'll be able to find a solution so I can stack enough steel somewhere to make it worth a drive to the yard.
You can get a small storage unit for $100 or so. You may find that the storage space pays for itself with the scrap you are able to turn over. Depending what you do, you may be able to make it work for you in other ways. I garage sale and found the storage unit was a great place for larger items that would make alot of noise.
I guess living in podunkville does have it's advantages. My daughter has one of the smaller storage units or 5x8' and it only costs $25. a month.You can get a small storage unit for $100 or so.
And this is a secured gated storage area.
P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
If you enjoy your freedom, thank a vet.
yes, the yellow and red are nice but when you scrap on the level that I do the iron pays for my gas and taxes and the rest is proft. This is why I can't understand those that cut cords and leave the rest behind.
Scrapper, Scrap Yard Worker, Horse farm worker, Cooler Puller and just plain ''tired''
NA...just thank goodness that they know not what they do.
From the Yard perspective, I can tell you that steel is 70% of our business by dollar. Non-ferrous is great, but there is more handling involved and margins are tighter.
Although steel is a very secondary target for my business I learned a valuable lesson. Acouple years ago I got a pick up truck load of fire extingushers, half steel and half Al.
I was very excited to get the Al ones thinking I was going to make much more with the Al ones. I didn't get exact weights on them but I guessed the steel ones weighed 5 times more than the Al ones. At that time I was getting $0.10lb for steel and Al was $0.50lb so they were equal in value or nearly so. Mike.
"Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}
Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked
Our dumpster is fenced off, so unless I share my apartment building with a scrapper who has room to stack steel, then it will just sit there and the apartment workers will have to clean it up. Judging by the things people in my building throw in the garbage, and the looks I get when I haul in a huge crt, I'm guessing that I'm the only scrapper in the building.
Copper and Steel run a close race in my books, last run I stripped a lot of copper and got around $230 total and $250 ish for steel. But as has been said, copper is a lot harder to find.
I love steel. I'm averaging 2000 - 3000 lbs a week and doesn't require much extra break down. Down side yard in raleigh nc is paying $200 gt for prepared. Still it pays gas money for the week almost! Keep your steel!
"Its in the hole!" - Murry
If your not keeping it I would assume your spending a &$@) load of $ on trash services, almost everything you break down contains steel. Throwing it away is very counter productive.
I would love to see what 1956 has to say about percentages and what not!
I make my largest amount on wire, different grades, so I guess that's copper. Then Ewaste, AL, carbide, SS. I don't get much copper other than just the wire. Cat5 is what I'm getting most of at the moment, and my yard is @ 1.10/# right now. Anouther big job in 2 weeks, hope to get a couple 100 pounds of wire.
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