So, how difficult is to start a "new" scrapyard\junkyard?
It can be hard based on your money needs. Don't think you will turn a profit real fast if you go "big" you will be better off to start small with alow amount of money and build ontop of that. I never had a bank loan or anything. It can be done..you just have to work hard at it.
Do you limit what scrap you will accept?
Sit down and look at it like this. How much will you offer to buy it for, what are your vendors offer to buy it at (make sure there is room for it to drop based on market) and how much time/labor will need to be invested into it. After all of that you will have a better idea.
Are permits difficult to obtain?
Some can be. Here in dallas I have a
e-waste company, we do not buy CU or AL so we needed no permits for that as e-waste is like iron.
Should I skip "whole cars\vehicles"?
Never skip anything. If you can get it for the right price and you have a place to put it..take it. I buy trailers that need repair and I will have my welder/auto guy get them back up and running and sell them. I can get some of them dirt cheap at scrap steel price.
How is the smallest amount of space needed to start?
Backyard, living room. Sometimes you can run a very large yard by being a broker. You can move trucks/trailers by a phone call. If you are at joy blow and he has alot of steel...put the good things on the front of trailer and steel on the back..unload the stuff you do not want to mess with...you get fast cash back in your pocket and brake down the better items and take them in. Doing this is like a space multiplier
How much should I bite off at the start?
As big as you can. In the scrap field..the more you have..the more money you make. So do as much as you can but make sure you dont get your self to deep that you cant not do what you said you can.
How can I measure if there is room in the current market for another scrapyard?
If people are calling you to come pick up there scrap and or you see it all over the place and you can get your hands on it fairly easy...then you should be able to start a yard for the metals you want. Just do some "feeling" if you want to get into the CU, AL or e-waste market to make sure there is a good amount there.
How do I pick a location other than zoning requirements? Obviously, access (major roads and railroad) are a plus.
Just as you said...take a map and draw some circles each circle will be zoning, along large roads, where you live, not a ton of traffic...people hate to go to a yard that they know they will be sitting in traffic.
I hope I was able to cover everything and not having this post as long than what is needed. But this is topic would be a very long one if you want good info.
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