Sorry, I should have given some more details on my situation. First, we are a smaller yard. We only receive about 1-2 tons an hour as of now. Second, we primarily sell our iron and tin to Weitsman in Scranton. They are the closest, and usually give the best pricing. Over the scale to the general public, they are giving 120/gt, and as a wholesaler, they give us 129/gt (as of TODAY- it was 144/gt last week). Obviously the prices have taken a big hit over the last few months. As for the shred I would be producing, I spoke to Adam at Weitsman, and he said its tough to give an exact price without knowing hard numbers (i.e. how many tons/day we will be producing) or seeing the product (as I havent even gotten the shredder yet), but a general rule of thumb is to expect a minimum of $40 more per
gross ton for shred. So based on todays pricing, (129/gt) I would be getting roughly $170/gt shipped to Oswego.
(PS- Weitsman wholesale pricing is based off 2240lbs, not 2000lbs per ton.)
Now, this shredder my friend wants to give me is a smaller one. Its meant for smaller, lower volume yards. It can only process 2-3 tons/ hour. But, it does come with everything. Feed conveyor, hammermill, outfeed conveyor, 2 magnetic crossbelts, shaker table, eddy current separator, sorting station, and a final aluminum conveyor with a third magnetic head.
A couple of things that are going in to my decision whether or not to take a chance with this machine. First, Im getting $.057 cent/lb just putting the tin into a log baler and sending it in containers. If I shred the material, I will be getting $.075 cents/lb. Not only that, put I will be pulling the good stuff (brass, copper, alum) out of the fluff and making profit where Id normally be giving it away. Granted, I now will have the expense of disposing of the fluff to a landfill, but I dont see that being a deciding factor.
So as of today, over the scale, Im giving customers $.035 cents/lb light iron/tin (so based on my current price Im making $.022/lb.)
If I was to shred the material, I would be making $.04 cents/lb. Of course this is gross. This isnt accounting for the disposal of the fluff, or electricity cost.
Bookmarks