Use the map below to find Scrap Metal Prices near you.
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia
Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland
Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey
New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina
South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
Results 1 to 20 of 98

Gold prices dropping

| Scrap Metal Prices

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    etack's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor
    Buying Tantalum capacitors

    Member since
    Oct 2012
    Location
    United States ohio
    Posts
    503
    Thanks
    437
    Thanked 633 Times in 281 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by NobleMetalWorks View Post
    If you decide to de-solder the contacts off, be aware that the larger silver contacts probably contain cadmium, and if heated will give off a gas as the cadmium burns, that is extremely unhealthy to breath. You might want to do it in a well ventilated area just to be safe.

    Scott

    Scott you have made this statement a few time as of late and its just not true. AgCdO/AgCd contacts are mainly used in small contacts. Like relays where the contact needs to be harder and last longer. Ice cube relays,router switch relays, dryer timers, things like that usually they are riveted in. Large contacts are going to be Ag, AGNi, AgCu. Also the waffle back ones will be Ag-Wc sinister pads. A way to test between the two types of larger contacts is that the AG-Wc will break when you try to bend them, and the other higher Ag content ones will bend.

    It is a good idea never to melt them for the rare possibility that you get a Cd or CdO and tin contact mixed into the batch . This is why most refinery's wont touch them the EPA hoops make it unprofitable.

    If you have info on the bigger ones let me know I have spent the better part of the hour tying to prove you right. I have never seen any over the size of a pencil eraser in real life. If I'm wrong I will amend my post to reflect it.

    Eric

    I buy Tantalum Capacitors and offer other services. Check out my thread for more info.

    http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...-cap-more.html

    http://recycletantalumcapacitors.com/

  2. #2
    jmurrow3 is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Kansas
    Posts
    50
    Thanks
    19
    Thanked 22 Times in 15 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by etack View Post
    Scott you have made this statement a few time as of late and its just not true. AgCdO/AgCd contacts are mainly used in small contacts. Like relays where the contact needs to be harder and last longer. Ice cube relays,router switch relays, dryer timers, things like that usually they are riveted in. Large contacts are going to be Ag, AGNi, AgCu. Also the waffle back ones will be Ag-Wc sinister pads. A way to test between the two types of larger contacts is that the AG-Wc will break when you try to bend them, and the other higher Ag content ones will bend.

    It is a good idea never to melt them for the rare possibility that you get a Cd or CdO and tin contact mixed into the batch . This is why most refinery's wont touch them the EPA hoops make it unprofitable.

    If you have info on the bigger ones let me know I have spent the better part of the hour tying to prove you right. I have never seen any over the size of a pencil eraser in real life. If I'm wrong I will amend my post to reflect it.

    Eric

    Hummm! Im still waiting on one of you smart Einstein's to post some pictures so us not so smart but hard working fellows know what your talking about.

  3. The Following 2 Users say Thank You for This Post by jmurrow3:


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

 
Browse the Most Recent Threads
On SMF In THIS CATEGORY.





OR

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

The Scrap Metal Forum

    The Scrap Metal Forum is the #1 scrap metal recycling community in the world. Here we talk about the scrap metal business, making money, where we connect with other scrappers, scrap yards and more.

SMF on Facebook and Twitter

Twitter Facebook