you know this "go look for it" attitude does not really feel like it fosters a sense of community to me as a new guy, and I dont even ask questions. it just feels like nobody wants to just chat. I suppose time is money and this is many peoples primary profession. It can be a hobby too, as in my case. Since I like to talk, I'll offer some answers. Most CRT TV's under 32" dont have even a pound of any one thing, however everything can be sold except the CRT's in MOST municipalities and the housing (unless your West Coast, I hear every form of plastic is paid for at one place or another in those states).
A cheap power drill is your best friend if you are going to go
e-waste/scrap. Your primary source of copper will come from the yoke, the electric tape insulated wire thing that runs around the set, and a few coils on the board. Very little aluminum unless you are grabbing a computer monitor CRT or projection TV. Your average 32" or smaller CRT set will have probably only a few ounces of aluminum, about a half pound to a pound of clean copper wire (sometimes there is that very tough adhesive stuck to the copper in the yoke, that might make it #2), a handful of transformers you can grab from the board, maybe a few ounces of #2 wire, and then the board itself can be sold as low grade. Thats usually a dime a pound give or take. Based on those weight estimations, I estimate an average under 32" CRT set to yield you about $3-$5 in stripped down resources. Of course unless you are using the right tools it will take you time to harvest that may not be as profitable.
I can gut the unit itself in about two minutes or less depending on the size. With the right shears/wire cutters, the board can then be cleaned off in about another minute. Then you get to nit pick the little things. Unscrewing those chips from the aluminum sinks, unwinding the two or three nice copper coils that are usually worth it is actually what will take you the most time. That adds about another 5 - 10 minutes per unit. So were looking at about $3-$5 for about 15 minutes of time, x4 is about $12-$20 a hour from just garbage people throw away. Sounds better than minimum wage at a box retailer/food service to me and you get to do it on your own time. But that is only from the one example cited. Your adventures will always get you a variety of scrap that can yield better results with more or less effort required.
I have it sorted like this.
1 5 gallon bucket for bare copper,
1 five gallon bucket for insulated #2 (I strip #1 and most home appliance power cables),
one five gallon for aluminum in general (only recently found out there are different pays for extruded vs cast vs cans etc),
1 sterilite square bucket for motors, transformers, ballasts ( i know the ballasts are different pay I just keep them together as they are both heavy lower paying per pound that are easy to sort out at the yard)
1 five gallon bucket for brass fittings, power/wire connectors, terminals etc..
1 sterilite bucket for stainless steel
and then I have one bucket that I keep for things that I need to further refine. When I had my truck I just kept the buckets in the back for the lighter stuff and would bring the motors and ballasts in with me to save on fuel. As I have always lived in apartments during my scrapping time, they are not too happy about filling up the patio with junk.
I may be in a financial position later this year to change all that. A house and a truck are very likely by this time next year. But in the mean time I just stick to it as a hobby. I only look in apartment dumpsters now if I am actually there for a reason, like visiting a friend or doing some kind of freelance work. I only grab small appliances and electronics. I have to leave behind the fun stuff like futons, fridges, water heaters, bikes, etc. I always grab bed frames as they pay a little higher and are easy to store in my outside closet. If there is still copper or brass on a water heater though you better believe I'll take that. Ill just process a dishwasher where it sits and leave the frame for whoever has a truck. Better believe I would grab that too.
I will be dead before I stop scrapping, no matter the market prices.
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