I'm also a teenage scrapper. Here's what I do:
Most of my metal comes from my father (he's a commercial plumber and gives me most of his old furnaces and other things).
I'll occasionally hit construction sites and grab their scrap. I usually average about 5-10 buckets of stuff and the occasional large item. This can be pretty profitable, especially after they do the wiring and electrical work. Contact local construction companies about doing this. Leave some buckets by the dumpster and ask the workers to put all the metal in the buckets.
Leave the buckets there in the morning when the workers first get there and come back later when they leave to pick up the buckets. If you have time, ask the workers about going around the site and picking up scraps. The next day, start over. You'll want to stock up on buckets. You can usually pull a few out of dumpsters.
Drive or walk around on garbage day and grab any metal. Start early in the morning.
Save anything you think might be worth more than scrap value and sell it on craigslist
Here's what I'd do if I had a truck:
Get in contact with electrical, remodeling, auto shops, and plumbing companies about removing any
scrap metal they may get. Tell them you'd be happy to pick up the stuff for free.
Put an ad for free metal removal on craigslist. Also check the free section every few hours for metal.
The key is developing your own routine and sticking with it. Do what works for you
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