To answer the queries. Yes I am operating as a sole proprieter, yes I carry a full insurance package, yes I maintain a lawyer on retainer. Yes I have a host of documents that cover the range of activities I endeavor on as a business from hard drive wiping, destruction to on site operations tearing out server and raceways. Yes I have a complete and detailed business plan which includes my growth steps, goals, achievements thus far and a detailed activities and processes memo so at a glance lenders and insurers can see what I am doing and fill holes for me if I'm missing something.
Now about wire output: I am at a point where I can do more than one ton a month every single month all by myself in power supply wire alone. I participate in a variety of auctions to increase this amount if I feel it prudent to do so. Additionally I also deal in more than a ton every single month in non power supply, computer related wire that is not ribbon wire, I classify as communications wire. In ribbon wire I still do 500-700 lbs every single month. So all together all by myself I could in a worst case scenario be able to maintain a payment AND profitability on a SMALL granulating operation that I could BUILD upon over time and not be forcing my hand into buying wire for very low turnover. If it be known I get screwed over on wire I know is much higher value but classified as low grade commo wire, it is commo wire but solid core...and pretty high recovery, I get paid terribly on alot of this stuff. My only outlet for a better price is most of a day's drive to and from.
I can realistically support 3000 pounds a month of material in house that is worth granulating for recovery. If you wish to crunch that math, add this, a 3 year loan on the machine, expected expenditure 20,000. Expected ongoing expense for knife and drum replacements, about 4 cents on the recovered pound. Electricity costs about 9 cents on the recovered lb (it will be less but lets call it that). I am planning for a wet table at this time but want to see one in operation, this is difficult to arrange. Wet shaker table recovery rates are 99.5% and higher as opposed to the best air shaker tables at 97-98 percent. Theres also an unrealistic complication from blowers, screens, filters, conveyors and so on. A wet shaker's main component is simply the granulator, the output screen (which can be changed for chop dimensions such as when doing smaller wire) and the wet shaker table itself, no blowers, no filters, no additional components, just the table, the tank, the output trays and the plumbing. What makes it better still is you can adjust the table while it works and actually see if your missing anything or not right there on the table. Also, such a table can also be used to separate any material of different weight, such as aluminum and copper...some thoughts to that im sure. I would probably spend extra money on a pre processor (A cable chopper) that pretty much chews down the granulator input material to bite sized pieces so it can work faster still...
Anyways...any e waste guy knows his largest output is usually going to be shred, boards and wire in that order. Wire outnumbers my aluminum most of the time. I posted another thread about maximizing your aluminum prices, this is my personal effort to maximize my wire, it is after all one of my biggest outputs and that would make sense.
Lastly for everything I've put on the table, that xrf gun STILL nags at me, I visit quite a few machine shops these days and while carbide is easy to identify by weight and with a magnet, some of the other lucrative alloys are not. Keep in mind im not purchasing labeled bar stock, that would be too easy, no this is a mix of who knows what rejected parts, not all of them identifiable enough to figure out what alloy was used to make it. Even then, it's troublesome to have a partially made reject looked up in the computer to see what alloy it's made of, it bothers my customers and I'm less and less comfortable doing it. I should also say it takes away buying power leaving the identification to the yard because then I have an even harder time storing and sorting the most valuable stuff and planning for intake of material based on grade. Lots of times I take a sample and come back for a buy only to find out someone threw the rest in with the iron dumpster. Can you imagine hearing about that with M1? Either way both of these high dollar items have their merits and I will have to consider it as the year closes out.
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