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Is all steel/iron the same price?

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  1. #1
    littlehoov started this thread.
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    Is all steel/iron the same price?

    Forgive me if this is a newbie question. I am in fact a newbie, Ive only been to the scrapyard once.

    At the yard I will be going to in the future, they have a big pile where all the ferrous material goes after you weigh in, you unload it by yourself with no supervision other than a small group of guys standing 50 yds away, then go weigh in again before unloading non-ferrous.



    The employees do actually wake up and get involved when you pull up with non-ferrous, so I figure they will help with the sorting of that, and I have been doing research in that dept.

    My question is about steel/iron items. Do yards pay different prices for certain things? It really seems like mine doesnt, or they would have someone assisting in that department. Is this normal? I just dont want to miss out on getting paid properly. I havent got enough material yet to make another trip to the yard, but ive basically been treating anything that sticks to a magnet as all equal. Is this the right approach?


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    supaholaya's Avatar
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    Yeah pretty much the same except cast iron which pays a couple cents more

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    My yards paying 160 for white goods, 190 for shred, 205 for #1 oversized and 215 for #1 heavy melt. All depends on your yard. They are allllll different. Some have lots of different types others dont. Best bet would be to call them. They'll be able to give you the best answer.
    If I didn't have bad luck, I'd have no luck at all...

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    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    There is about 3 or 4 classes of "steel".
    I get paid for white goods which is appliances.
    light weight stuff which is like computer carcasses.
    Short (2-3 ft. or less) iron which is thicker than 1/4".
    Tin, that's really thin stuff like roofing.
    Cars-trucks usually have their own price.
    Then you'll have the heavy iron that you don't have a torch to cut, usually #1.

    Different yards have different policies.
    When I cross the scale their camera takes a pic of my load in the truck, I drive out back to the pile and an employee meets me and points out where he wants it unloaded at the pile. He calls up front to tell them what I had on from "eyeballing" it.
    This link has some pic's that might help show you the differences of different metals.
    Scrap Metal Pictures - Rockaway Recycling
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
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    littlehoov started this thread.
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    Thanks for the input, Ill probably give them a call before I head up there whenever the time comes.

    I was really displeased with how I was treated, but I may be biased since I work with the public myself and try to be helpful and friendly and things of that nature. So when I go somewhere else and the staff acts like I dont exist, it puts a burr in my saddle so to speak. That had no way of knowing I was a first timer, but a simple sign wouldve been nice, or even just point in a direction. 4 guys staring at me picking their rears while I drive aimlessly around is not what I call good service

    I would guess my yard does everything at one price, one employee did come over to tell me that I couldnt put a 100lb propane cylinder in the pile because it didnt have a big enough hole it...I was able to plead my case at having the valve removed and several 3/8 in holes drilled in the bottom. I tried to fill it with .38 caliber holes on the bottom, but it turns out a jacketed 9mm round will not go through the bottom of a propane cylinder. I didnt feel like using my even more costly rifle ammo, so I just took a drill to it haha. But I suspect he wouldnt have come over at all if I didnt have that one particular item.

    My load was in the back end of a Cherokee, so they probably couldnt see much.

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    Quote Originally Posted by littlehoov View Post
    That had no way of knowing I was a first timer, but a simple sign wouldve been nice, or even just point in a direction. 4 guys staring at me picking their rears while I drive aimlessly around is not what I call good service
    What about you? Did you go up to any of them and ask anything? The first time I went to the yard the first thing I did was walked up to an employee and told them it was my first time there and asked how the placed worked. Don't be afraid to ask.

    and my yard has a few categories for the steel. Shred, prepared, rotors, comes to mind, might be a few more.
    Last edited by Caveman; 08-05-2013 at 08:32 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Caveman View Post
    What about you? Did you go up to any of them and ask anything? The first time I went to the yard the first thing I did was walked up to an employee and told them it was my first time there and asked how the placed worked. Don't be afraid to ask.

    and my yard has a few categories for the steel. Shred, prepared, rotors, comes to mind, might be a few more.

    sounds like my first trip lol. when i came through the gates, there was nobody out where the scales were located (didnt even know that area was the scales) so i kept driving till i saw the stop sign up ahead, they guided me where to park to start unloading. i parked, and then asked wait, dont i need to weigh first lol. had to go all the way back out again. finally somebody was there. Dont get me started on my first trip to the non-ferrous side (I WILL NEVER GO THERE AGAIN ON WEEKEND)

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    Quote Originally Posted by littlehoov View Post

    My load was in the back end of a Cherokee, so they probably couldnt see much.
    you're taking relatively small loads; me too. The only way I get cast price for cast is if my entire load is cast, and I let them know my expectations, and confirm it with someone in a decision making capacity before I unload.

    if I take a mishmash of stuff in the back of an SUV they aren't interested in weighing cast vs. shred separately for a few pounds, so when I mix it up I only get "shred" or as some yards call it "light iron" for anything ferrous.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Caveman View Post
    What about you? Did you go up to any of them and ask anything? The first time I went to the yard the first thing I did was walked up to an employee and told them it was my first time there and asked how the placed worked. Don't be afraid to ask.

    and my yard has a few categories for the steel. Shred, prepared, rotors, comes to mind, might be a few more.
    Agreed. First thing out of anyone's mouth should be "This is my first trip to a scrap yard, what do I do?". I've always found everyone to be patient and helpful. It's when you try to act like you know what you're doing when you don't, that you get eaten alive.
    People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.

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    I've never run into anything like that either littlehoov. I guess every yard I've gone to had someone, somewhere, pointing where to unload, signs saying something, and possibly(most always actually) someone giving an up close visual of the load. They still won't usually volunteer any info though, so you've got to take every opportunity to ask. Different yards will also vary a lot in how they do it.

    Non-ferrous is where I've usually noticed the biggest cluster(tr)ucks, haha, and they'll run over ya with em too ; ) It's best to know what you've got, and what they're paying(call each time before you go) and have it as organized as possible before you get there

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    don't take offense at this ,but. there are thousands of archives, you need to study some of them if you want to be a scrapper, and survive long enough to make any money.

    It is just like any other business, you start with education, hard work, and common sense. (the common sense thing, I base on any one who thinks they can blow a hole in the bottom of any pressure tank with a "9". .

    Don't deprive your self of all the free knowledge available in the archives. Together there are literally thousands of years of experience from all over the world. just my .02
    "anyone who thinks scrappin is easy money ain't doin it right!"

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  17. #12
    littlehoov started this thread.
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    Well thanks for all the replies. I have been reading and studying, Ill probably learn a lot on my next trip to the yard as to how they do things. Ive been trying to focus on e-scrap, so havent been getting a great amount of ferrous other than what is obviously light iron, shred, whatever you want to call it.

    But Im open to anything that crosses my path, and want to know what to do with it. Ill keep learning more and more im sure.

    For the record, the 9 did penetrate the bottom of the tank once, but just barely, just made some big dents otherwise...hey they shot a hole in one on mythbusters with a 9! Granted it was the side of the tank, not the bottom, ive learned the bottom is much thicker. (See! Always learning)

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    Quote Originally Posted by jord0690 View Post
    My yards paying 160 for white goods, 190 for shred, 205 for #1 oversized and 215 for #1 heavy melt. All depends on your yard. They are allllll different. Some have lots of different types others dont. Best bet would be to call them. They'll be able to give you the best answer.
    And this is what I still don't understand after 4 years of scrapping and reading posts on this board. One would think that all steel is the same. But, I see many posts talking about different prices for different steels. all the yards by/around me pay one price for (all) steels. You would think it would be a nationwide standard on pricing but it isn't.

    What difference does it make if one yard buys my truckload of steel as ''all the same'' vs. ''I pay you for different steels'' if the steel all goes to the same places?

    How can the yards make money like that?

    The only differnce in my main yard between steel is pot metal which, is actually paid higher. Color me confused on that one! because IMO it can't contain that much zinc to mark an almost 30 cent difference?
    Last edited by newattitude; 08-06-2013 at 01:29 AM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by newattitude View Post
    And this is what I still don't understand after 4 years of scrapping and reading posts on this board. One would think that all steel is the same. But, I see many posts talking about different prices for different steels. all the yards by/around me pay one price for (all) steels. You would think it would be a nationwide standard on pricing but it isn't.

    What difference does it make if one yard buys my truckload of steel as ''all the same'' vs. ''I pay you for different steels'' if the steel all goes to the same places?

    How can the yards make money like that?

    The only differnce in my main yard between steel is pot metal which, is actually paid higher. Color me confused on that one! because IMO it can't contain that much zinc to mark an almost 30 cent difference?
    How far is the next yard?

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    There are 3 in a 10 mile radius where my main yard is.

    I'm just wondering how the yard makes money if they pay you more for certain steel vs the yard that doesn't pay you more when most of it goes to the same places. If the yard pays ME more, do THEY get paid more? It seems like the lowest paying yard would make the most profit then.

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    How different yards make their money all comes down to a matter of size. We will not sell anything less than 10,000 ton. So we make more money than the guy that scrapes up a hundred ton every month. There are brokers (middlemen) involved in all of this who take their cut and then there is the politics question which i wont get into,all of which affect the price and the yard profit. I have been around this for many years and the goings on behind the scenes never ceases to amaze me

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    Quote Originally Posted by hmburner View Post
    How different yards make their money all comes down to a matter of size. We will not sell anything less than 10,000 ton. So we make more money than the guy that scrapes up a hundred ton every month. There are brokers (middlemen) involved in all of this who take their cut and then there is the politics question which i wont get into,all of which affect the price and the yard profit. I have been around this for many years and the goings on behind the scenes never ceases to amaze me
    You mean the more of any product you provide, the more you get paid per pound? And everything in the scrap metal industry is not above board? I'm amazed and, frankly, SHOCKED!!!

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    There was and innocent enough question asked,so I thought I would give a real answer. Our yard (I wont say who I work for) has three different prices for the same grade of steel. 1) the hurtin unit price 2) preferred customer and 3)friends of the buyer who come from the same country. I like the hurtin units the best.....you know the ones that need money for diapers for the baby

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    directrecycle's Avatar
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    Several grades of steel at our main yard.
    Last edited by Mick; 08-08-2013 at 09:09 PM. Reason: Deleted advertising

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    Scrap Specifications Circular

    Alot of info

    Guidelines for Ferrous
    Scrap: FS-2013
    Last edited by hobo finds; 08-09-2013 at 12:05 PM.


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