Originally Posted by
BRASSCATCHER
What was the difference in the first load to this one? You said you made money on the first. Why did you use Sipi? Did someone recommend them or did you look into others thinking they were the best to go with? Why no payout on platinum ? Their percentage on silver looks a bit low. Is that their normal rate or was it base on the weight you brought them ? Did you remove as much steel from your material as possible ? I do remember reading that the going rate for representation was somewhere around 1% of the payout. If this is correct it would have not cost much of anything, maybe Scott or Eric can chime in on this.
One final question, if your third and fourth load is like this last one I wouldn't expect different results, why did you go back to them ?
Sorry Bill hopefully the results on the next load comes out in your favor. Thanks for sharing with us as it hopefully helps others out here.
Virtually no difference between the first and second loads. The third load is purely green motherboards mixed socket. The fourth load is a mixture of green and colored boards. I've talked to Ledoux and Introspecte on representation. The way it was explained to me, you pay by the hour + travel. The going rate is about $350 an 8 hour day, by the time you figure in travel, it works out to about $1000 bones through either place. Maybe someone with larger loads can get representation on a recovery basis, but no one is going to touch representation for 1% of any load under 10-20k pounds I don't think.
The silver payout amounts may or may not be low, but it's kind of a moot point. There isn't enough silver there to fight over. The real money is in the Gold. As for Platinum, I was told while doing my research for this adventure that there isn't enough in
ewaste to bother with.
I went back to Sipi because they are reasonably close to home, and I can get a discounted freight rate using a business partners fleet of expediting vehicles to get my materials there. There are 3-5 other refineries that I could be dealing with, but at this point I'd like to get things straightened out with Sipi if possible. There is another person I talk to that is using what he calls a "refinery" in Kentucky, but I can't get the exact name of the place out of him, and can't find any reference to KY refineries anywhere on the net. If anyone knows who he is referring to, I'd love to know. Same with any other suggestions. I also think that there is nothing going on here that isn't going to happen at any other refinery located in the states. Most of these places are just middle men that are actually shipping further up the ladder (Xstrata in Canada or one of the European refineries). I haven't talked to Xstrata yet, but have been told to expect 10-20k# minimums to be paid on a recovery basis.
From talking to people, what happens is they shred your materials, sort in to (allegedly) equal piles that should represent a good mix of the load, and then pull a sample to incinerate and process. From there, the math is worked out and applied towards your whole load. There's a million different ways for them to take advantage of the situation, from the selection of materials to incinerate, to the actual incineration process, to the gold % calculation and pin sample obtaining methods. Unless you're there to watch the whole thing, and know how it works, you're pretty defenseless (outside of representation). I wasn't going to waste my time having my samples ran by an independent lab, but after talking to a few different assayers, I finally sent them out yesterday. If the refineries don't think you're going to keep them honest, they will fleece you blindly is the general consensus from both assayers, and others that have went down this road. It's pretty sad that they can't do business honestly, but oh well. They really don't care. If you don't send in material, someone else will.
If, for example, I send the samples from load 2 out, and they come back in at 4 oz instead of the 2 that Sipi says, from what I understand, we split the difference, and Sipi pays out on another Oz, but still keeps the 1 Oz extra that should be recovered from the load. As you can see, they still make out like a bandit. If your independent assay falls outside of their acceptable splitting ranges, then you head to an Umpire Assay, and there is another method for determining which payout will be recovered. This whole process takes time, and time is money. Most refineries are banking on people not fighting them.
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