For those of you in Jersey, NY, and N. Carolina, this company recycles CRT's. They were the first to recycle a CRT in the U.S. Maybe you could check them out? http://www.advancedrecovery.com/crtrecycling.shtml
They also have a place near Cicero IL.
Printable View
For those of you in Jersey, NY, and N. Carolina, this company recycles CRT's. They were the first to recycle a CRT in the U.S. Maybe you could check them out? http://www.advancedrecovery.com/crtrecycling.shtml
They also have a place near Cicero IL.
Have you got a link to the video your talking about? I would be really interested.
Excuse my ignorance, but what is the tape wrapped device in the back of the power supply. I find them in everything, they appear to be layers of copper wrapped in layers of tape.
Can you point one out in any of the pic's above? I'm not sure exactly what your talking about.
Or find a pic of one on google to post here,,,
are you talking about the yellow tape with copper in it ?
Mech. In the picture of the power supply it is just in back of the fan and Dee, yes it is often times yellow tape
The only thing I see right behind the fan is a transformer with yellowish paper/tape wrapped around the center part. Yes they have copper in them, if they are larger I take them apart and get the copper, if their smaller then they go into a bucket with all the others, even the sealed ones going to the picture tube.(the one with the bigger red/orange wire)
I guess that is the transformer then. I attempted to take on apart but the tape was wrapped around quite a bit, figured it was not worth it.
it's worth it to me fnd, but I save them until a time when I'm not real busy.
Dee, I tried to take one apart but it was just several layers of tape wrapped around what appeared to be not that much copper. I will have to give it another look if you say it is worth it.
I will give that a try and let you know how it works out
Is there any reason you cant just take the tv remnants to the dump? They take them in Michigan at SOCRRA in Troy.
It all depends on the state/local laws if you can or not. I can take my TVs either to the county recycle and pay $10 per tube. Or I can take them with the rest of my trash to the transfer station for $20 a trailer load. Guess where my TV's go. Now - if I could drop off the TVs for free at the county recycle, they would go there along with the cardboard boxes, newspaper, etc. I take there.
Thanks for providing such a detailed thread. I'm going to check with my goodwill tomorrow. Did you ask if they minded them being gutted?
I told my Goodwill that I recycled the innards and they said it was fine as long as I put the plastic back on it. Gets rid of two problems safely, the plastic and the tube.
I vote a Sticky!
Sometimes, if you score the black masking tape and cut, then grab one or two strands, you can pull it through the whole length of the cable eliminating the need for unwrapping.
I USED to use that method , quite a bit.
Until I cut them into about two-foot sections, fold them in half , put them into a toaster oven (I picked up the toaster oven scrapping, plan to use it for tempering steel knives, My other profession/ full-time hobby scrapping affords me)...
Put them in the toaster oven on 400F or so , even on broil, they get sticky, and then put a board (like 2x6) under and they are sooo much easier to slice and peel.
Course the aluminum cheapo TV ones would have been better tossed in with "55 copper" power cords.
Which I unintentionally had been doing for a while and getting 1.10/lb. .
Newbie question here.
Which wire is the one you have to discharge? I've heard stories of people getting some nasty shocks from live wires inside monitors.
Cheers!
Tom
Start here, it should pretty well explain it all. This is why we keep telling you folks to read the older threads. Hope it's not too confusing. If so, ask away. Hoss, take a bow,,,,lol
http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/showt...scharging+a+tv
Mechanic is like the forum's reference librarian! He always knows where to find the elusive thread. He deserves a boatload of thanks.
And i deserve some kind of money for every time Mech has linked and said somethin cute about my tender tidley bits.
LOL.
I agree. Hoss should get some kind of royalty every time his zapped tots are referenced.
On a side note...here you go Hoss. A customized plate. :D
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c3...97/totzapr.jpg
You know what Idaho? If you can figure out how to get that as a signature for me, i'll use it.
LOL. I need to go to bed, jesus.
haha. Sure. Copy and paste this into your sig. Take the "X" out of the ends.
[IMG]Xhttp://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c331/Mark97/totzapr.jpgX[/IMG]
The ferrite in all transformers is recyclable. It is not ceramic. I keep it in a separate bucket--broken or whole. Once the bucket is full, I take it to the yard and get paid. It's metal!
As for the degaussing cable in black tape; most of the time it's #2 copper (orange/red not pink). Same as the tube cone copper.
My question is....that silver dust that flies around when you break the glass...it's lead????
Please don't break the glass, you are releasing phospher which is considered hazardous waste along with the lead. Here is the condensed version. The lead is in the front glass.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PhosphorQuote:
In a CRT, phosphor coats the inside of the screen. When the electron beam strikes the phosphor, it makes the screen glow. In a black-and-white screen, there is one phosphor that glows white when struck. In a color screen, there are three phosphors arranged as dots or stripes that emit red, green and blue light. There are also three electron beams to illuminate the three different colors together.
anyone know why the degausing cable is wraped in tape and not just coated like other wire?
Could be due to the fact that other wires need to be spliced in to it.
Ferrites can be sold as scrap as stated here. They are made of a combination of zinc and iron or magnesium and iron powders pressed together. I'm not sure they are a true ceramic. They are around the monitor chokes and also as donut or tube shapes around wiring in monitors and most compute equipment. Sometimes they are painted and often rubber sheathed. The ferrites around wires are selleable RF chokes to electronics hobbyists. They are sold as shreddable steel scrap in general. If a scrapyard questions you having them in your load simply tell them to check them with a magnet. Their rule is if it is magnetic it has to be scrap steel or iron.
Also shown in the photo of the power supply board are small copper transformers on the board which can be popped off. A couple in this photo are wrapped in yellow tape. They are can be sold to some scrapyards as low grade copper scrap. The current pricing is around 20 to 25 cents a pound, sometime higher but don't assume every scrapyard takes them. You need to ask first. I have about 15 scrapyards withing 60 miles of my house and only three of them take them. Regards, Chris Hyder.
Welcome Powerplay, while your at it please go here; Introduce yourself
Then here, Thank you; Beginners Start Here - Metal Recycling Basics
Enjoy the ton of info that is here.
Thanks Mechanic688 for the welcome and quick tips... I just added a post to the introduction area and will check the basics.
Also, thanks for your service to our country!!!