The one question that I can answer without knowing your background, experience, or tools is yes even the scrap yards in the rural parts of the country can handle that amount of aluminum and lead.
The easiest strategy is to just broker the deal. I have had scrap yards send the equipment and man power to a project for the metal. All I did was broker the deal and gave them access. Easy money with very little work. I would contact several yards to get the best price. Each yard will contact their buyers before giving you a price. They will probably pay you for aluminum breakage, but you will not have to remove wood, paint, or other items.
If you have the time and energy to under take this project, as mentioned before a torch would be worthless. A
plasma cutter would be beneficial. I have used metal blades in a circular saw to cut aluminum. Bees wax saves on the blades. I use it on my sawzall blades and I think it doubles their live expectancy. I have no idea about how to deal with the lead. I hope someone else with more experience in this area will chime in and enlighten us.
As far as getting the boat on land to work on it, I would not go to the expense of renting or hiring heavy equipment. I would use logs, pickup, and winches to drag it up to dry land. Start the first logs in the water and continue placing logs every six feet. This would allow the boat to float and roll ashore. If the shore line is sand, it will be harder and you will have to reduce the weight before this strategy would work. If the Egyptians were able to build the pyramids, you should be able to get the boat out of the water. Good luck and let us know how this works out.
Bookmarks