The bulbs wont have Mercury in them, i think they will be High Pressure Sodium ( HPS ) bulbs.
Or Metal Halide ( MH )
If they are Metal halide the inner bulb will be a glass tube squashed at both ends with a football shape in the centre, its probably greyish/black/silvery inside it. With a metal wire sticking out both ends, joined to other wires.
The High pressure sodium bulbs will have a whiteish opaque/clearish glass tube in the centre of the bulb, with a metal wire sticking out both ends joined to other wires.
The ballast unit will have either HPS, or MH on it, before a number, most likely 400 or 1000, thats the wattage.
Low Pressure Sodium bulbs, long tubular bulbs with a U shaped tube inside it, normally 50 watts, will have a silvery Mercury looking metal droplets sitting in the dimples in the U tube.
Thats Sodium metal, its not dangerous like Mercury is, it will fizz & pop if it comes in contact with water, then it sparks & flares a bit too.
Fun with Sodium.
Theres Mercury Vapour bulbs, sorta like a Metal halide bulb, but with a metal filiment, just like in a normal incandesant bulb, thats sitting around the inner glass bulb.
Those lights dont have transformers, they use the filiment to heat up the inner bulb, vaporise the Mercury metal inside it, then when its hot enough, it trips a little switch inside it to run electricity thru the Mercury vapour inside the inner glass tube. It then gives off light.
If its got no ballast and/or transformer, and theres that filiment inside the bulb, its a 97% chance its a Mercury vapour bulb.
If the Metal halide or High pressure Sodium bulbs are relatively clean inside, they could be sold.
You would still need to test them in the proper unit and that takes some time because of the long warm up period before they are running properly.
Even then i have had a HPS bulb with a bad connection weld inside it stop working several minutes after it had got into the running stage.
Those bulbs get used for Hydroponic plant growing. There is a market for the units if they do work.
Unfortunately there's some dodgy people involved in that industry.
'Professionals' would only buy brand new units too.
Considering the amount of units you have ( far too many for a single buyer ) and that you will have a decent amount of scrapmetal & $$$$ involved, plus your time. I wouldn't let anybody else know about what you are doing.
Its simply none of their business, its yours, and yours only business. ( Oh, 'cept for us guys @ Scrapmetalforum.com , LoL )
You dont need to tell anyone, or brag about it. You getting enough kudos from all us guys here anyway. ( All the way from the other end of the earth, from here )
Once you have processed & sold your scrapmetal you could possibly sell the bulbs. It does open yourself up to the chance of other, abit dodgy people & their situations too.
If theres any brand new bulbs it could be worth finding a buyer. Maybe. Best to stay safe though. If you could sell them to some business, i dunno, it depends on the situation.
I'd put the bulbs in a sack, inside another sack, till its full, tie it off & using safety glasses & earmuff, and a baseball bat....
Knock them into a smaller volume, then into a dumpster & gone burger.
( Hmm, 'you learn something every day. It turns out that 'gone burger' is a NewZealand saying )
https://www.urbandictionary.com/defi...erm=goneburger
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