My scrap yard is small and the prices suck. What I have determined is the scale reads in whole pounds. So if there isn’t enough weight to flip to the next digit it is rounded down. Sometimes a little and sometimes nearly a full lb. Now fortunately, for me, most people bringing in scrap there don’t separate it very well. So the guy running the scale (almost always the same guy) likes my loads. He does a quick check then weighs it up. He regularly gives me container weight or even a few lbs of something I didn’t bring in!
Back to the rounding issue, let’s say you bring in 10 lbs a week, fifty weeks a year, for a yearly total of 500 lbs. Now some weeks it is 10.1 or 10.2 so you get 10 lbs. Other weeks it will be 9.9 or 9.8 so you get 9 lbs. On average you will not be getting paid for ½ lb per trip. ½ lb x 50 trips (1 year) = 25 lbs non-paying material. Do this for 20 years and you have lost out on 500 lbs!
Now change that to 20 lbs every other week for a year. 20 lbs x 25 = 500 lbs. In this case you are still losing ½ lb per trip, but your total would be ½ lb x 25 trips = 12.5 lbs non-paying material.
How about bringing in 50 lbs 10 times a year. Still 500 lbs for the year and still losing ½ lb per trip on average. ½ lb x 10 trips = 5 lbs non-paying material.
Finally 500 lbs once a year. .1 - .9 lbs non- paying material. 20 years loss of about 10 lbs.
So at my location it is better to make bigger loads of fewer categories. I can still go every week but I usually bring in four categories or so. AL, irony AL, irony brass, electric motors. Or Copper/AL fin, insulated wire, stainless, #2 brass. The higher dollar per lb the less frequently I bring it in. Losing a ½ lb of irony AL isn’t the same as losing a ½ lb #1 copper.
J
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