Cut the steering head off and TAKE it to a metal recycler... and you might get $10I don't want $$$, I just want it gone.
Cut the steering head off and TAKE it to a metal recycler... and you might get $10I don't want $$$, I just want it gone.
Likely a dragger.Is it going to be a roller or a heavy pain in the ***
Inland Iron and Metals?I have known a few "scrappers" that did OK... it's a CASH business, so there are a few tricks to the trade... and one of those "tricks" is you're not making any real money cruising the curbs on garbage night.
To make money you need regular sources of scrap.
Metal shops are GREAT for scrap. They have "cuttings" that are clean, the "cuttings" are already written off the books, so you drop a case of beer on the foreman and load up your truck.
Back in the good ol' days of better tax write offs on vehicles, a buddy had a fleet of nice new Kenworths (with BIG motors, road ranger transmissions, 72" sleeper, cool paint job... REALLY nice trucks.... pulling scrap) that pulled the worst looking, rattiest disposable side trailers you've ever seen. He'd drive them for 3 years, writing off the truck price 100% off the scrap sold... then sell the really low mileage trucks for cash... and put the cash in his pocket. He sold 3-4 trucks a year, I doubt he made a dime in metal recycling. All the trucks he sold went logging. Ya can't do that anymore. Damn the CRA.
another guy i know had a lot off Wolfedale where he could park 100 cars. The price of scrap fluctuates wildly... so he'd work his nuts off when the price was low, and no on else was working (there's WAY TOO MANY scrappers) and when no one else is working, there's no competition, so you pay nothing for the scrap cars and he'd fill his lot. When the price went back up, he emptied the lot. He's younger than me, and retired before I did.
We get scrap stolen from time to time. In Jan a thief emptied our stainless bin, got away with 1500lbs of clean 304 chips.One shop many years ago the scrap bin was out behind bay #3. Unfortunately at the back of bay #3 is where the brake lathe resided.
I was turning a set of rotors off of a truck with the old spoke style hubs. With truck rotors, you put them on the lathe and machine them still attached to the hubs. These rotors/hubs are a good 100lbs each.
I finished the first one, took it off the lathe and used a handcart to wheel it back to the other side of the truck. Dropped it off, cleaned it up, installed outer bearing and pounded in a new seal. Headed back to the lathe to get the next one cutting the first pass as I reassembled the other side. Got to the lathe and the hub and rotor was missing. I noticed one of the scrap guys truck leaving the lot and the scrap bin was empty.
Caught up with him down the road and low and behold there was the hub and rotor in the back. "I thought it was scrap, it was by the bin" yeah sure, only it was inside 20' away.
That was the last time he was welcomed at that shop, or any shop in the area.