Results 1 to 8 of 8

Higer gas prices and steel steel sucks

| A Day in the Life of a Scrapper
  1. #1
    hobo finds started this thread.
    hobo finds's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2010
    Location
    tucson, az
    Posts
    4,746
    Thanks
    6,035
    Thanked 5,907 Times in 2,555 Posts

    Higer gas prices and steel steel sucks

    So gas prices climbing steel not so much. Steel every where to be found, can leave it and come back it will still be there. So now time to get creative leave some shred items in place take prepared steel add to the pile I have in my truck go to the yard. Leave scrap yard go get the shred items I found add the sheet iron I have around here and back to the yard another day. Not goanna get rich this way, but if I bring more steel home to process the wife will kill me! LOL


  2. The Following 2 Users say Thank You for This Post by hobo finds:



  3. #2
    Patriot76's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Buffalo Commons
    Posts
    2,949
    Thanks
    10,589
    Thanked 7,220 Times in 2,256 Posts
    Tin and wire is being buried because of the owners preference. Unprepared steel, #2, and #1 are being stockpiled. Since it is spread out over several farms, the wife does not see it.

    My wife will return to the ranch for the first time in a year this summer. It will be a free for all, but she will return to the cabin within a month. Then it will be time to return to stockpiling and waiting for better prices. Best guess is 100 tons of iron in her pasture and round pen. The ace in the hole is the training of her 1/4 racing horse 3/4 quarter horse is complete. Ready for the barrels and poles.

    In this world, hiding metal is easy. The challenge is finding the right time to sell.

  4. The Following 5 Users say Thank You for This Post by Patriot76:


  5. #3
    mikeinreco's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2011
    Location
    TENNESSEE
    Posts
    4,975
    Thanks
    1,257
    Thanked 5,023 Times in 2,350 Posts
    I appreciate your posts and seeing how the other half lives but wire being buried??.......Is it not feasible to haul this in with other items?.........You are talking about copper wire??........If not copper probably not worth effort as far as you have to go......Thanks inquiring minds want to know

  6. The Following User Says Thank You to mikeinreco for This Post:


  7. #4
    DakotaRog's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    1,611
    Thanks
    602
    Thanked 1,675 Times in 830 Posts
    I suspect P76 means barbed wire. Most land parcels in SD used to have either 3-4 strand barbed wire around them. A lot fewer (mostly for those who had sheep) had "woven wire", a strand of barbed uptop and then a wire "panel" so the sheep couldn't crawl under them. I personally like hunting antelope in such pastures as they develop crawl under spots and act as a funnel (antelope won't even jump over the multi-strand barbed wire fence but perfer to crawl underneath).

    Anyway, sorry for the off-tangent, but you start roping off 40, 80, 160 (or more) acres in individual parcels and there is a lot of steel wire strung. Even crop fields had such fencing because they tended to graze the stubble fields after harvest, especially corn, with cattle and sometimes hogs. Fast forward to today. A lot more cash grain farmers who have no need for miles of barbed wired fencing so the old fences come down and got rolled up, waiting for...??? Even now, a lot of expedient "pasture" is created by doing one strand of hot-wire electric than keeping a permanent fence.

    As P76 alluded to, many, many tons of rolled up rusty old barbed wire fences are laying rolled up in many shelter belts or other "idle" land spots waiting for...??? The vast majority will never be used again.

  8. The Following 2 Users say Thank You for This Post by DakotaRog:


  9. #5
    mikeinreco's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2011
    Location
    TENNESSEE
    Posts
    4,975
    Thanks
    1,257
    Thanked 5,023 Times in 2,350 Posts
    makes sense we rarely see barbed wire here in the city

  10. #6
    Patriot76's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Buffalo Commons
    Posts
    2,949
    Thanks
    10,589
    Thanked 7,220 Times in 2,256 Posts
    Dakotarog is correct. It is barb wire and woven wire strung throughout pastures. It only pays $ 25 a ton and it would be hard to load more than a ton on a trailer to haul. After being buried for decades in pastures, you cannot get the grass and dirt out of it, therefore the yard will not even take it. To the real recyclers here, this may sound awful. But for the realist, I charge by the hour to clean and bury it.

    All copper is stockpiled for the future.

    Hobo, it was not my intent to hijack your thread. You have the luxury of quick access to a yard, we have the luxury of room to stockpile. Different lifestyles with a common goal.

  11. The Following 5 Users say Thank You for This Post by Patriot76:


  12. #7
    Copper Head's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Aug 2011
    Location
    Up North
    Posts
    1,883
    Thanks
    579
    Thanked 1,014 Times in 516 Posts
    Oil has dropped a bit (barrel ) If you watch once it hits $60 $61 all sorts of optimism
    Yet I notice as ISIS takes over territory Barrel price drops . My feeling is,they are not a part of OPEC and once they have new land . They sell lower then OPEC . You hear all these concepts But once ISIS took over new areas with access to sell oil
    prices did go down from the start
    Over all the worlds markets are twisted,
    much is going on .
    Now we sell scrap from our hard work and resources for less
    the buyers over seas are now getting resources for less . If there is a way to keep it that way to those who benefit will keep it as such .
    The yards adapt & have there product purchased at lower price to sell same as always.
    Us scrappers are at the loss. In the past Steel paid well so selling CU was a casual deciding factor. Stockpiling CU is not the same for me now . CU AL is needed each week to compensate steels low selling price.
    Last edited by Copper Head; 05-29-2015 at 06:57 AM.

  13. #8
    Grayson97's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    18
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 3 Times in 3 Posts
    I sold 600lbs of shred i needed gone when i was on lunch from work today. I did go to the lowest paying yard but its thr closest to the shop also. Made a whole 26 bucks. Last year at this time it was almost twice that.


  14. Similar threads on the Scrap Metal Forum

    1. Steel still sucks! But hopefully looking a little better soon...
      By hobo finds in forum Scrap Metal Prices
      Replies: 103
      Last Post: 12-29-2015, 05:11 PM
    2. Spring steel/couch springs - Worth more than regular steel?
      By Sagan in forum Scrap Metal Questions and Answers
      Replies: 5
      Last Post: 05-30-2015, 01:43 AM
    3. As steel prices are down time to prepare steel?
      By hobo finds in forum Scrap Metal Questions and Answers
      Replies: 1
      Last Post: 10-27-2014, 07:37 PM
    4. Steel Prices and Where I Think it Going
      By Tcgs in forum Scrap Metal Prices
      Replies: 62
      Last Post: 07-13-2013, 08:19 AM
    5. Steel prices
      By pcscrapper in forum A Day in the Life of a Scrapper
      Replies: 29
      Last Post: 07-04-2013, 06:06 AM

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

 
Browse the Most Recent Threads
On SMF In THIS CATEGORY.





OR

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

The Scrap Metal Forum

    The Scrap Metal Forum is the #1 scrap metal recycling community in the world. Here we talk about the scrap metal business, making money, where we connect with other scrappers, scrap yards and more.

SMF on Facebook and Twitter

Twitter Facebook