I looked for this answer but couldnt find it on here.
I got some of what i think is red and yellow brass thats connected together and i was wonderin the easy way to disconnect them.
Thanks
I looked for this answer but couldnt find it on here.
I got some of what i think is red and yellow brass thats connected together and i was wonderin the easy way to disconnect them.
Thanks
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If they're screw threads then a vice and a wrench will be the best (washing up liquid if its stiff). If they're welded then you'll have to hacksaw/angle grind them apart. I personally don't bother - my yard will accept both as mixed brass and it's a high enough payout for the relatively small amounts I deliver.
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Check to see if your yard pays a different price for each, like above post says may not be worth the hassle.
Recyclable Material Merchant Wholesaler
Certified Zip-Tie Mechanic
"Give them enough so they can do something with it, but not too much that they won't do nothing."
ok thanks
my yard does to but i dont find much brass so i didnt no what the price difference was.
I also found like 15 pounds of brass keys should i just put it all together then?
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Triple check they're brass and not zinc/stainless which are more common in modern keys. Otherwise yes, lump 'em in.
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That would probably work to mix the keys but make sure they are not on a steel key ring and just to be safe maybe keep them separate till you get to the scale and toss them in if they give you the nod.
I took all the rings off and went over them all with a magnet
And most of them are over 20 years old i found them when i was cleanin out a HUD home i think a locksmith used to live there
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i had a brass rod that was yellow on one end and red on the other, it was strange, but because i dont deal with enough red brass, i just let it go in as yellow. the difference was like $1.50 for yellow and $1.70 for red, so i didnt bother with it.
the keys are yellow brass, and unless they are car keys with a plastic encased top, they just go right in the yellow pile/bucket. nice find!
We're the renegades of Junk!
i always toss them in with red if they have yellow connected..as long as you dont make a huge habit of it most yards wont care..
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Be certain the red is brass and not copper. What kind of connectors or pieces of things do they look like they might be from?
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To answer your question there are 3 types of brass: Red, Yellow, and White
Most of it i think is from a old underground water meter and then i found a bunch of fittings that connect to air hoses.
But i know the difference from copper and brass lol
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White brass contains more than 50% zinc and is too brittle for general use. The term may also refer to certain types of nickel silver alloys as well as Cu-Zn-Sn alloys with high proportions (typically 40%+) of tin and/or zinc, as well as predominantly zinc casting alloys with copper additive.
It is usually a silver-ish grey.
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Does the edge look sparkly and porous when you break it? That would explain quite a few items I've found. Keys and soap dishes?
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That sounds right, I found some red brass in a copper (actually brass) fireguards feet, like this pic>
The first time I have ever found any 'red brass'.
I did find some 'white brass' in some antique milking machinery. My guess is that its hard to find & only a little difference in price anyway.
Unless theres a lot, which can happen if you are scrapping machinery & find a large amount of certain parts, I'd put it in with brass.
Here, brass is worth$5 & Copper $7 a Kg, so the difference in price would only be a few 10's of cents.
Somebody will probably 'call me out' on that though.
I still have a pic in my mind of the scrapper who did a dive off the trucks bed so that a co'worker didn't put the Ali/bronze in with the Phosphur/bronze.....
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