![]() |
Quote:
|
Heat the shop with the blast furnace, and use the ingots to pay the bill when the scrap price goes up in the dead of Winter...come out even. That's a Win-Win in my book.
|
Quote:
Only thing they take for recycling here is #1 and #2 plastic, glass, metal cans. I seem to remember styrofoam, if clean, is valuable to recycle. Not sure if that is true. All the beer cans and water bottles have an extra tax, I mean deposit, to encourage recycling. 2 quart plastic containers you get juice in are too. Every few months I turn those in for cash. |
Quote:
for reference, a couple of pics of similarly sized ID fans: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1563909713.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1563909713.jpg |
what do they do in Germany?
|
Quote:
The reason Tokyo was firebombed was that there were a thousand manufacturing shops spread out in tiny wooden buildings. One guy makes wing material. One guy makes tarps. Anyone can make a small wood-fired kiln using basic materials such as bricks and clay. Anyone can chop up (non fire-hazardous cough) metal material in any amount for later use, or just as an art piece. |
These goods are commodities and like any commodity they have value - and that value goes up and down.
Steel, aluminum or any metal is the choice commodity - Living in Chicago, there are the "scrappers" that go into neighborhoods looking for metal. Even the homeless will walk with shopping carts picking for metal out of garbage cans. Then there are the dumpster divers and I have seen all kninds: men, woman and children. Electrical stuff (copper) has value as well. Then there is the other stuff: food waste, yard waste, plastic, wood/paper - that value is less and the demand has shrunk. My company has many rubber injection machines - I geneate a fair amount of rubber scrap. I was selling it until Novemeber of last year. I now had to pay for recycling - which I did because it was even with the cost of landfilling it. In March of this year, no one was taking it - it is now landfilled. It isn't easy, but the best option is to reduce the output of scrap. Raw materials cost money. When my compnay estabishes a cost for products made out of metal, the scrap dollars are calculated and the production cost is reduced by the value of the scrap. This especially true in high alloy, speciality metals, Personally, I'm trying to reduce plastic waste - I really loath plastic bags. |
make slag
<iframe width="1063" height="598" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/TUSOczTBkWU" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
Quote:
|
Here how they recycle in England:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/07/23/sri-lanka-send-100-containers-human-remains-disguised-recycling/ |
Quote:
|
I live in rural area and recycle is not an option with our waste collection system. Get visitors from the city all the time (Liberals)......Always poking around looking for my recycle bin. When I tell them it doesn't exist, they don't believe me and put it in different bags for me to sort out...
I humor them and throw all but the metal in the wood stove when they leave..... |
Quote:
|
[QUOTE=LakeCleElum;10535647]I live in rural area and recycle is not an option with our waste collection system. Get visitors from the city all the time (Liberals)..
Isn't it interesting that liberals want to conserve and conservatives want to waste? |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:01 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website