New to all of this. Closing my business and have a lot of metal to scrap. I have scrapped some and it is time consuming for some items, primarily since I have never scrapped on a large scale before. Bought a
wire stripper which has saved a lot of time. But I have some wire that is too large for the largest opening and some to small to strip. I think that is something that I'll have to find a solution. Watching your scrapping videos while scrapping has been a great asset. The first big issued encountered was a large transformer, which is about 3 to 4 times larger than any I have seen on this site. Plus, some of the smaller ones seem to have different construction than some seen stripped. The issue is some of the assemblies the metal that surrounds the copper coil, and has two seams, which are broken apart allowing access to the copper, does not exist on a few of these. Some of these appear that the U shaped pieces were altered during the assembly with one "U"s facing up and the next one facing down. As a result there is no seam to attack. If there are any ideas on how to approach this, your thoughts would be appreciated. There is one that is about 10 inches high and 4 to 5 inches wide. The thickness of the material will probably require using a circular saw with some type of grinding cutter. Any thoughts on how to address this issue would be very much appreciated.
Will have many circuit boards most with the gold tabs. After removing these tabs is there a market for what remains?
Watch your fingers and keep your feet quick!
Haydad
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