China also, for the last 10 years or so, have been busy building the worlds largest and most modern Navy on the sly from scratch. a navy is almost 100% metal.
China also, for the last 10 years or so, have been busy building the worlds largest and most modern Navy on the sly from scratch. a navy is almost 100% metal.
Last edited by EcoSafe; 07-13-2015 at 01:04 PM.
"anyone who thinks scrappin is easy money ain't doin it right!"
olddude - You are absolutely correct about China, they have been building a modern navy and a large one. By numbers yes a larger navy with 673 naval vessels to our 473. This is all vessels including auxiliary ships (tug boats, barges etc.), having more vessels doesn't make you a "Naval Power". If the most vessels was how navies are measured, then North Korea would be the greatest naval power with 1,061 vessels. North Korea is not a "Naval Power" or are they a modern navy. Most of their naval vessels are landing craft intended to move troops to their neighbor South Korea.
China is for sure a emerging military supper power, they are #3 on that list behind #1 U.S. and #2 Russia. India is #4, with U.K. #5, France #6, South Korea #7, Germany #8, Japan #9 and Turkey #10. No doubt there has been a major shift of China's ability to project their military might. As a major military and naval power, they however are not even close to us as far a Naval power, nor or the Russians. The US Navy has 20 aircraft carriers, including our helicopter attack carriers. China only has one carrier period and as far as I know it has never left the confines of the China Sea. So far they are a Naval power that only threatens their Asian neighbors, that doesn't mean they don't have ambitious plans for their navy.
A nations military might is measured in many ways, one being a nations debt and that is what our country really needs to focus on. We need to quit fighting other nations battles for them, doing so has squandered our resources and mostly responsible for our huge debt! Most important our best resource, the lives that have been lost or permanently harmed (I'm only counting the American lives too!).
Yes you are right China is building a big navy, We can do better if we only will get back to the basics that made this country the great nation it is, that starts with taking care of us first!
Last edited by bigburtchino; 07-13-2015 at 03:11 PM.
To stay on topic, all that debt is part of why scrap metal prices are so low, as the debt adds to economic uncertainty! Don't think so, all one needs to do is talk to a Greek.
Greeks? Maybe a little. Main thing is global supply and demand.
Australian giants BHP & Rio Tinto seem to have an unending supply of ore, and apparently huge resources to develop new methods of refining and production. Iron ore now down to $55/ton and they are stockpiling next to stockpiles in Australia. (Google it) Rio Tinto just increased aluminum production by nearly 50% at its smelter in Kitimat Canada. As long as they can take dirt and make it into metal on a huge scale, they are going to indirectly dictate the market price for scrap
our biggest market is Chinese scrap processors, who buy mixed scrap by the boatload. When their customers aren't buying so much, or buying cheaper elsewhere, they in turn don't buy as much, bid lower, prices go down.
Copper same deal. Peruvian rock with a mere 0.3% copper mineral content is now being mined and processed profitably, volume way beyond what our Chinese processors can do with our buckets of motors and wires. With worldwide demand down, The scrap processors can't sell as much, can't make as much money, have to bid lower for the containers of shredded wire. The scrap industry wants to stay in business, something's got to give, ain't gonna be less pay for employees or rent, so they bid less for their raw materials. That ripples down through all the middle men, which includes the guy at your local scrap yard. As long as we're willing to accept whatever they pay, they'll continue to have raw materials and they can stay afloat. And let's face it, we show up with a few buckets, we aren't in any position to change anything.
Supply and demand. The supply is huge and getting bigger...do the math!
Makes the whole craigslist and ebay thing more important than ever.
I write down what I take in and compare to the sheet they give back. no trouble since I started doing it.
First lets keep things in perspective , Give or take these are the prices . I'm not so optimistic about the return of what once was . Be realistic. By all logic it will come back but not on our wish Scrappers ride the wave China and Greece have a role But China is building a huge military so they still need metal and Guess What ? There getting it for Less !! We know there
the customer that caused a boom .
Just keep in mind it's possible the buyers of metal have us just where they want us . We still are finding - we still go to the yard -
We take our lower pay 1/2 on some metals . Don't ask why so low ? Whats Low ?
1999 I sold a truck to a yard for $30 a ton granted fuel was in the $1 and change range - and lots of things cost less .
So take your money & find more , or discontinue -This is what it is .
You ask
say I wait 2 months would they go up or fall farther down?
It matters not -- You find You sell - it's kinda like income averaging . Knowing how to find - having inventory - helps ride the storm . finding and hording as long as you have other sources of income could be a nice investment (a messy looking investment )
Last edited by Copper Head; 07-14-2015 at 10:24 PM.
oh so cast/sheet are always close to the same price? also how do you know if its extrusion or cast if it breaks when hit with a hammer its cast? if it bends when you try and bend it its extrusion?
The extruded aluminum alloy is the stiff frame material that aluminum storm doors and windows are made from. Most of it won't bend but Some will depending on what is mixed in with the aluminum.
There is a softer extruded such as the trim used in older bathrooms that had 4'x8' sheets of a water resistant material on the walls. This extruded is softer and will bend with force. But sometimes the trim is pot metal and will break easily when bent. They look much the same. Also old store fixtures use it as decorative trim.
Many times the ridged will be coated or have color all the way through and the soft extruded is most times a silver/grey color all the way through. I have read that some yards want the soft and ridged sorted and some do not.
It seems that most extruded aluminum is about 20 cents or so a pound more then sheet and cast is. But lately even the prices for the extruded is closer to the other aluminum prices.
Cast aluminum will crack and break up much like cast iron will.
Last edited by ChildhoodDream; 07-15-2015 at 03:01 PM.
Yards seem to pay same for all AL, with exception to Wheels
Was not China also the reason for higher prices when they were buying? We need another nation to start building ghost cities! I say fire up all the old steel mills here in the USA! Send back the ships that had the Walmart stuff back empty! Process our metal here!
It is a Race! With all the uncertainty political, markets, economic - 18 politicians running for president, none with any solid economic plans. Hold on we are in for a ride as scrap metal prices "Race" to the bottom! To the bottom of the barrel we are going.
i see thanx for the info. also what about aluminum cable is that extrusion? or is it white copper?
I had the same situation. I don't care if they are off by a few pounds with my e-waste (.08/lb) or motors or transformers (.15-.25/lb) but when i was short 2 lbs of copper on my receipt one time because they screwed up the tare weight, I dumped my next load of copper on the scale and got a "why did you do that, now the guys have to pick it all up?" (it was a lot of little pieces too, hehehe) I replied "it's better than me losing a pound of copper" Now I usually just use shopping bags and make sure I glance at the scale.
METAL IS MY MISTRESS...PLEASE DON'T TELL MY WIFE!
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