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Given the market, why are the newest scrappers even bothering? - Page 2

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  1. #21
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    Like so many before me have said, it's all about resale value.

    I can spend 30 minutes fixing a fridge and make $75

    The other day, I bought a 1999 Ford Ranger 4x4 for $300 not running. I stuck an alternator on it and sold it for 3500 yesterday.



    If you're practical, mechanically minded, and have a little business sense along with some social skills, you can make it in this business. If you don't possess one of those qualities, then, in times like these, you may have to switch careers.

    Let me go off to the side for a minute.

    Social skills are everything in the world of business. Are you the type of person that everyone loves, or do you have an endless supply of "haters?" Do you have an abrasive personality or do people gravitate towards you? If you have good social skills, you will make it in most business endeavors.

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  3. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by SteelMill View Post
    The other day, I bought a 1999 Ford Ranger 4x4 for $300 not running. I stuck an alternator on it and sold it for 3500 yesterday.
    That's about right. I've come across a couple like that myself.

    The Foxy E-Scrapper
    Buy/Sell Thread: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...ents-more.html


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  5. #23
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    It's a shame that we, as Americans, have become so sheltered and so babied that when something goes wrong with a piece, we throw it away, when it could be a perfectly good item, with a little bit of money and time.

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  7. #24
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    I have to completely agree. This spring, I picked up a project truck at auction. It was consigned by the county, after a mere 29 years of service. It drives very nicely, and so far is one of the best trucks that I've owned. I have two Gateway LCD screens in the processing center that date back to 2002. Thirteen years later, they still work great.

    Both the truck and the monitors were thought to be worthless or obsolete to someone. That's the problem- we're too quick to assign that tag. In scrapping, the skill to determine what is and is not obsolete is the most important skill out there. If you know what to save from going to the yard, and resell it for more than scrap value, you'll do well. If you have those abilities and can do reasonably well in these markets, wait until the times get better. Now, you have an arsenal of skills that will earn you even more!
    More than Scrap Value Shipment Tips: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...tml#post242349

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  9. #25
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    well the state has to spend all their money every or they do not get as much next year so they waste a literal metric tons of good usable items so they can get new trinkets next year .

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  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by SteelMill View Post
    Like so many before me have said, it's all about resale value.

    Social skills are everything in the world of business. Are you the type of person that everyone loves, or do you have an endless supply of "haters?" Do you have an abrasive personality or do people gravitate towards you? If you have good social skills, you will make it in most business endeavors.

    Like the other tools in your box you can learn and practice better sales skills(social skills). I wrote about the basic sales skills in a thread in the private room.

    I really liked your point and as has been proven again and again in history, adversity produces innovations. Mike
    Last edited by miked; 10-13-2015 at 09:04 AM.
    "Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}

    Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked

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  13. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by hobo finds View Post
    I feel the newest scrappers are getting in as there is so much stuff around. Looks like easy money. When sheet iron was $.115 every one was out, nothing lasted 10 min at the curb. Now stuff sits awhile longer. Thing I wonder is how many do one load and then done...
    I see people going in the scrap yard with 150# shred, or maybe one dryer. They don't know where to go in the yard so it looks like it's their first time. Go to the window and get paid $3.00. I half chuckle. It's a learning process.

    But then again, getting paid +$3 is better than paying -$10 disposal fee.
    Last edited by nutpie; 10-13-2015 at 09:20 AM.

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  15. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by ScrapperTrecycling View Post
    My answer would be no, I can't make it on scrapping. But the $$ isn't why I started so I may be an odd ball here. SHOCKER!

    If I knew then what I know now, would I start scrapping in this crashed market? Yes, I would.
    It's been such a weird and wonderful journey - so far away from the rat race that I used to live and breath.
    Out there, all I had was money. My boss showered me in bonuses for being a good soldier. "Ole faithful" as she liked to call me.
    When my legs were kicked out from underneath me, the physical pain was nothing compared to the mental anguish of feeling worthless.
    I might have sat in that wheelchair, marinating in my own pity party, had scrapping not mysteriously landed in my lap.
    It was like following a little trail of breadcrumbs. Each step, a small accomplishment...and OMG...you people! REAL PEOPLE!

    My boss' daughter (and ex fellow employee) passed away in July of what they called "system fatigue." She died a very wealthy woman...and only 2 weeks shy of her 40th birthday.

    So yeah, the money sucks. But I'm alive and happy. (and I can go to work in my pajamas )
    @ eesakiwi - nailed it!
    Wow! You get dressed to scrap. You must live in the city...

    Quote Originally Posted by SteelMill View Post
    Like so many before me have said, it's all about resale value.

    I can spend 30 minutes fixing a fridge and make $75

    The other day, I bought a 1999 Ford Ranger 4x4 for $300 not running. I stuck an alternator on it and sold it for 3500 yesterday.

    If you're practical, mechanically minded, and have a little business sense along with some social skills, you can make it in this business. If you don't possess one of those qualities, then, in times like these, you may have to switch careers.

    Let me go off to the side for a minute.

    Social skills are everything in the world of business. Are you the type of person that everyone loves, or do you have an endless supply of "haters?" Do you have an abrasive personality or do people gravitate towards you? If you have good social skills, you will make it in most business endeavors.
    You are so right. I don't know how many times striking up a conversation with complete strangers has led to a job doing something to help them. Another thing that is sometimes worth more than anything money can buy is when the person opens up and tells you some fascinating fact about their life. The fighting they saw in WWII, or the great save they made at a job, or a cherished time with their child on vacation, or just a moment of laughs. The best of times are the times spent sharing with others.

    Quote Originally Posted by SteelMill View Post
    It's a shame that we, as Americans, have become so sheltered and so babied that when something goes wrong with a piece, we throw it away, when it could be a perfectly good item, with a little bit of money and time.
    I don't mind, throw it in my yard.

    Quote Originally Posted by matador View Post
    I have to completely agree. This spring, I picked up a project truck at auction. It was consigned by the county, after a mere 29 years of service. It drives very nicely, and so far is one of the best trucks that I've owned. I have two Gateway LCD screens in the processing center that date back to 2002. Thirteen years later, they still work great.

    Both the truck and the monitors were thought to be worthless or obsolete to someone. That's the problem- we're too quick to assign that tag. In scrapping, the skill to determine what is and is not obsolete is the most important skill out there. If you know what to save from going to the yard, and resell it for more than scrap value, you'll do well. If you have those abilities and can do reasonably well in these markets, wait until the times get better. Now, you have an arsenal of skills that will earn you even more!
    Picked a Toro mower from the trash and put gas in it. Started the second pull. I have someone coming to buy it for $100 this aft.

    Being able to think outside the box is a skill that is being taught out of our kids in a school system designed to make good little minions who will be punctual and not complain as they work a monotonous life stamping widgets on a line. I love the fact that I do something different every day.

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  17. #29
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    Being able to think outside the box is a skill that is being taught out of our kids in a school system designed to make good little minions who will be punctual and not complain as they work a monotonous life stamping widgets on a line. I love the fact that I do something different every day.[/SIZE][/FONT][/QUOTE]

    When I think inside the box, it feels like I have a box on my head.
    METAL IS MY MISTRESS...PLEASE DON'T TELL MY WIFE!

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  19. #30
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    We are no paid no more for shred in france and belgium, you can unload it at the scrap-yard but you don't get paid, i think there will be a lot scrappers who will stop their hobby...

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  21. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Roudeleiw View Post
    We are no paid no more for shred in france and belgium, you can unload it at the scrap-yard but you don't get paid, i think there will be a lot scrappers who will stop their hobby...
    I definitely won't be dropping anything off for free! I think if that happened around here, those in the know would figure out real fast that if you leave it at the curb, someone will pick it up. What I mean is, if I took a load in and they said they weren't paying me for it I would take the hit and then start leaving gutted items at the curb and chuckle to myself about how the person that picked it up would be learning a hard lesson shortly.

    Clean metal has dropped to under .06/lb here and I was to afraid to look at shred but I imagine it's down near .04/lb now.

    I was looking at my receipt today and did some quick math: today $51.00 (some wire, clean metal, ewaste and Al), a year ago would have been close to, if not over, $80! FML!

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  23. #32
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    $33 a ton today for sheet iron sucks and sucks again!

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  25. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by AdmiralAluminum View Post
    I definitely won't be dropping anything off for free! I think if that happened around here, those in the know would figure out real fast that if you leave it at the curb, someone will pick it up. What I mean is, if I took a load in and they said they weren't paying me for it I would take the hit and then start leaving gutted items at the curb and chuckle to myself about how the person that picked it up would be learning a hard lesson shortly.

    Clean metal has dropped to under .06/lb here and I was to afraid to look at shred but I imagine it's down near .04/lb now.

    I was looking at my receipt today and did some quick math: today $51.00 (some wire, clean metal, ewaste and Al), a year ago would have been close to, if not over, $80! FML!
    I just did a quick guesstimate on my last receipt, and, using prices from one year ago, I would have had about $400 instead of $300

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  27. #34
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    Well little scrap drop off point (honey hole) has closed down.
    The guy who owns the property, he fenced off a area and put up a sign 5 odd years ago saying. [Free drop off point for cars, no household rubbish]

    Right at that point he and everyone else realised they could make good money scrapping out cars.
    So he hardly got any cars, but he got metal, roofing metal, fridges, stoves, washing mc's and mucho other metal, and then CRT TV's...

    I got onto it and made a deal, I take nonferrous, give him my ferrous everything, keep a eye on the area, dissuade thiefs.
    He had another guy with a deal too, he brought washing MCs for $20, fixed them up, sold em, $ for family, good.

    But, the ferrous price dropped, he was selling his stuff as 'shred'. We don't normally get that deal here in NZ. But his ferrous is contaminated a bit and he gets tons of it, volume counts.
    But a couple of months ago the price dropped again, so he got the scrap dealers to pick it up rather than do it himself.
    But, well they don"'t need the metal and too much rubbish was being dropped off.

    So he has closed it.

    On the other hand, I have a car now. I know I can fix flat screen TVs. I have half a ton of escrap to sort and sell. I need time to work on my house. I have a lot of #2 Copper to clean down, $500 odd. I have no debts. And very little overhead$. And its comming into summer now...

    I figure, clean up the escrap, sell it. Clean up my nonferrous, sell it. Make a car trailer, I have enough parts, I relise now, to do it. Even the number plates. Advertise for metal and escrap, flatscreens, see how that goes. There's no place to drop scrapmetal off to now.
    Work on the house during summer. Finish it off. Get a paying tenant to cover all my bills. And then look for work, in town or out of town.

    Fixing shipping containers looks like fun. Get some hours under my belt and some paperwork cleared and its a job in any major city in the world.

    Because of the shifting NZ$, only Ferrous metal has really dropped in price. Nonferrous has dropped, but by, say, 15-20%. Its not that bad really.

    But Ferrous has dropped right down to nothing for light metal, HMS is very low too @ US$70-$100 a ton.
    With petrol being US$5+ a gallon here... That overhead can be a game killer.

    I will also be able to concentrate on ' selling for more $' the stuff I have found and put aside, on our version of eBay. That will be interesting, I have never sold anything on it before. And I have lots of stuff to sell...

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  29. #35
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    This is a great time for someone to start scrapping. ( I have not been drinking)(yet)... Ask yourself what was or is the hardest part of starting up a new business ? Money!!!! When we started Urban E Recycling 3 and half years ago Gold was at 1800 Silver was at 48 and copper was hovering around 3.50 and shred was .11lb. Sounds great except we didn't have money to buy material with. I purposely avoided customers I knew I couldn't buy from yet because of that, so we had to set up a business model that worked around that point. As we developed cash flow I was able to get more aggressive on the buying side but it took time.

    Now with prices so low it takes much less to buy and you can make the same margin as you did before perhaps even more. If you are never going to buy scrap then because so many have decided to "drop out" there is so much more volume out there which will more than make up for the loss of high prices. BTW gas is down over 2 dollars from the good old days also so factor that in to your CR<V=NP That is cost ratio lower than value equals net profit. ( I completely made that up and it doesn't really make much sense but it makes me look smarter than I am )

    In all seriousness though, this is a great time for someone to get into the business if they are willing to commit to it,work hard and be patient. Feel free to contact me about start up experiences or just to tell me im a idiot . Good luck and sincere wishes for a happy safe and prosperous 2016 everyone

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    I think new scrappers will survive my advice is to offer something the people want , I find here in Kittery there are people with money who cannot be bothered to go to the dump . Lately I have been picking old tube TV's charging the dump and a pick up fee plug at least getting the cord, my advantage is I have a great job and can wait and be picky with what I do.
    Old dogs care about you even when you make mistakes;
    God bless little children while they're still too young to hate

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  33. #37
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    I'm a service manager at a Yamaha outboard dealership in Bermuda, and I'm about to turn 30 next year and all I think about is scrap. Not because of the money, but because I enjoy it! I don't mind being knee deep in mud, cutting cable out of machines at the dump vs being in my khakis, polo and shoes selling motors and boats. In fact, in some ways, I prefer it. You can see what your hard labor, reaps. And, I don't even have a scrap yard on the Island, I have to save it all up to ship it to the States!

    Im thinking about starting up an "e-waste management" company, but doing everything and just running with it. I'd rather work 80 hours for my self than 60 hours for someone else......
    If it's not bolted down it's mine, if it's bolted down and I can pry it up.....it's still mine....

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  35. #38
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    I've always looked for and focused on sold more then scrap value items, over straight scrap items, but never turned down the opportunity to pick up free metal when it was $210 a ton here. Over the last year the only thing that has changed is I am getting rid of any shred items and keeping some non-ferrous until prices start to rebound. I can afford to wait 1-2 years frankly if that's what it takes, because my 90% of my profits are from better then scrap value items. Someone just starting to scrap could still do so profitably, if they focused on resale items, or they were willing to put forth the effort to acquire as much scrap as possible and have a steady supply. It's all a matter of your circumstances and what you're willing to put into it.

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  37. #39
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    I am new to this myself,I find it fun to tear up things and see what is inside.I do not know anything about the good old days so for me this is just extra money to fund other things I do such as reselling on Amazon,Ebay and Facebook.I knwo it is not paying good BUT it IS free money no matter how small it is..

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  39. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by SteelMill View Post
    It's a shame that we, as Americans, have become so sheltered and so babied that when something goes wrong with a piece, we throw it away, when it could be a perfectly good item, with a little bit of money and time.

    I say DITTO..I find washer and dryers and repair them..it can be easy sometimes and sometimes not..if not and to expensive to fix it goes to the shred

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