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Robarons
Penny Hoarding Member
   
 USA
522 Posts |
Posted - 06/02/2008 : 20:58:59
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Have anyone ever ventured into this kind of scrap? I learned and was told only to look for Copper, Brass, Alum. metals and anything thats magnetic is bad. However stainless steel pots,pans,utensils, sinks etc. at .70 lb. sounds pretty good.
Am I viewing this correctly? If so SS can be bought cheaper and heavier than say Alum things. And is .70 a pound right? Why arent we jumping on an easier metal like this?
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Robber Baron= Robarons |
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NotABigDeal
1000+ Penny Miser Member
    

USA
3890 Posts |
Posted - 06/03/2008 : 06:28:05
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Stainless is a good scrap item. I don't mess with it but many people do. If you have the time and space to store it, I say go for it.
Deal |
Live free or die. Plain and simple.
"If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your council or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen." - Samuel Adams |
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91 Posts |
Posted - 06/03/2008 : 16:48:06
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| i am currently getting .80 per pound on stainless. There are plenty of sinks out there and most restaurant equipment is stainless. I believe the burners on electric stoves are painted stainless. |
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Flbandit
Penny Hoarding Member
   

USA
851 Posts |
Posted - 06/03/2008 : 19:38:54
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| I take it when I find it. It was at $1.00 not long ago. I just picked up about 5 lbs. of SS cookware at a yard sale for a buck. |
Are you throwing that out? |
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478 Posts |
Posted - 06/06/2008 : 16:34:36
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Stainless steel varies in alloy content. It's the alloy that makes it valuable like nickel, chrome etc. There are dozens of different types. Flatwear or sanitary stainless would be one of the lowest grades and thus have the lowest percentage of valuable alloys. It is also HIGHLY magnetic. Try a magnet out on your stainless forks and spoons or a modern Canadian coin. This is low grade stainless.
High grade stainless is used in special applications and is usually reserved for industrial metals that need extreme heat or corrosion resistance. As a rule, the higher the alloy content, the LESS magnetic the stainless will be. If a magnet barely sticks to it, it's probably very expensive stainless scrap. If you know the alloy, all the better as the scrap yard will pay you junk prices otherwise. FWIW |
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