Originally Posted by
bogie
Am I wasting my time or can I make money off these items?
1) TVs other than the cords
2) computers and accessories
3) Grills
4) bed frames
5) springs from old couches and beds
6 ) ceiling fans
7) metal filing cabinets and desks
Thanks for any input
1)Televisions suck for scrap, not so much in the fact that they don't yield scrap, they do, they're just messy and a pain in the arse. The older tube televisions. You get those 30lbs behemoth 19 inch dinosaurs and with those you find some idiot has cut the power cord to it and gotten the heck out of dodge. The easiest way to finish this bad boy off, is to take a hammer (I recommend a mini-sledge) and just bust the back of the tube off with a couple whacks. This will remove the copper core attached to the vacuum tube and open the back up so you can grab the board connected to the coax jack. Do yourself a favor and get a rubber handled hammer and rubber handled wire cutters. Televisions can still hold a charge in their capacitors and they will straight light your arse up like the fourth of July. It sucks. Either way, they're good for an easy pound of #2 copper and some miscellaneous wiring and circuitry. It's basically like saying "No, easy 5-10 bucks, I won't swing this hammer twice, so I can make you."
2)Computers are awesome for scrap. So many people are just discovering this, which means if you pay attention and talk to the pioneers of the pc scrap industry around here, you won't look like a monkey wearing oven mitts trying to rub one out. Here's the controversy, Most people don't fully realize what you can get out of computer scrap. The general population has started to realize motherboards are worth money. How much money? They're not sure, however this is causing a stir in the wallets of fools and rich fools alike. People realize there is gold in motherboards and have begun trying to farm them. Whatever, good for them. Don't be that guy. Every piece of a computer is worth something. The case is good for light iron scrap. If you have an Alienware case you can make an easy 100 bucks on
Ebay because Alienware doesn't sell their limited edition cases by themselves. Processors can be worth up to 60 bucks a pound. Most people don't even get that one or know it. CPU fans are one of the most commonly overlooked items yet they're thrown out all the time. You can get electric motors on those. Hard drives, people sell these whole but it's nonsense to do so because you can get an electric motor out of the platter spinning mechanism and the tops are stainless. In another year or so, It's going to get manic and nonsensical. Like storage unit auctions because of Storage Wars on TV. It'll be that stupid.
3) Grills are money. Any black grill that is made by "Char-Broil" is caste aluminum. You can clean them with a hammer. It's that easy. 3 whacks and you're 3 bucks richer. All the burner accessories if they have single burners or propane hook ups are usually stainless and brass. Get some screw drivers, put in work. Even those small round 24 dollar models, that look to be all tin, usually have aluminum legs or an easy 5 dollar resale value with a little sanding. Make sure you know your brand names. People love Webers. Easy resale value. Smokers are awesome too, smokers are almost always made out of heavy heavy steel. With a grinder you can make one worth an easy 40-50 bucks in short steel and that maybe takes a half hour. Do the math, that's like 80 bucks a half hour. Only crooked lawyers make that.
4)Bed frames are great. What's not to like? It's a quick 20lbs you can either cut up as short steel or sell as tin. You don't really have to prep it, people throw them out when they toss their bed, and you can resell those to furniture and bedding stores if you know the right people. Seriously, people pay upwards of 30 bucks for them new. They're cake.
5) Couches and beds are tricky. Here's where I stand on this... I know what actions I've committed on couches and beds and I know whom I committed those actions with. Not everyone is as pretty as me. They gross me out. You can make money on hide a bed couches pretty easily. Usually a hide-a-bed sofa is good for about 30-50lbs depending on the size of the bed. They're easy if you torch them or use a grinder or sawzall and cut them out. Bed springs are different. They're bulky, take up truck space, only weigh 15-20lbs, and they're awkward in all ways. Take your average truck and see how many you can get in. Most I've done is about 8-10 before things got dicey. Kinda pointless for 200lbs of tin scrap. That's 20 bucks here. Doesn't even cover gas expenses, plus bed bugs are flippin' annoying.
5) I don't know what the deal is with ceiling fans. Is there like a alt.ceilingfanlovers board or something? You can get a small motor, mixed brass, and a little copper. Go for the big industrial ones. I mean ceiling fans weigh 10lbs, and it's usually the faux brass housing that makes most of the weight. You can spend a good 20 minutes tearing one down and get like 50 cents worth of copper and maybe a dollar off the motor. The newer ones aren't even brass anymore. I wouldn't turn one down for free, but I certainly wouldn't put it up there as a money making strategy.
6) Metal cabinets and desks, those are money. Junk those all all day long. These desks are a good couple hundred pounds and you can always stuff the drawers with more scrap. Cabinets you can do the same with. I get these all the time off curbs because most loner scrappers can't load them by themselves. I put a winch in the bed of my truck. It's cake and it tastes good.
Dude, honestly, this stuff is just the tip of the iceberg. This is just the newly common knowledge stuff. Read into the forum a little more. I usually hand out a list to most of my clients that has a total of 94 things on it that I take.
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