bw489822 wrote:
…the yard I go to doesn’t pay as much attention to detail as I would if I were them...
I’ll make no judgement and leave it at this—assuming you don’t understand the consequences.
Intentionally adding stuff to the wrong category hurts the industry.
Yes the vast majority of canister capacitors are aluminium. But also cardboard and plastic and oils and carbon. Not to mention the silver or steel or nickel contacts and others components.
One of three things happens here.
1–If it’s a small yard they load up Gaylords in bulk. Sell them to a larger company who after years of working together grabs the Gaylord by the pallet with a lift truck and dumps it into a feed pile. Which is totally unmanned and feeds into a shredder.
2–shreds on site and sends the contaminated load to a refiner
3–shreds the load on site and sends the contaminated materials to an overseas production company that melts (not refines) the shred into casings for electric car batteries that fail to contain the electrical issues in the battery and allow it to bust into flame melting all 5 passengers into a non-recoverable goo of post car that must now become low grade steel meetings bodies and all.
If long posted here, elsewhere, everywhere: if you care about more than just profit never mess with the classing. It destroys the entire system.
Most larger recyclers will buy canisters as oil filled hydraulics ($0.22-ish) or electrical ballast ($0.18-$0.24) today’s pricing
Every bad melt lowers prices globally. 10 Troy pounds of under valued gold dropped the international gold value 2% in less than 24 hours and creates a major mistrust. One company not paying attention…
I’ve seen such issues with copper, aluminium, brass…! Please, just don’t do it. It’s a quick gain to game the system but everyone pays the price
Believe me the moment a scrap yard gets on the bad side of the man/woman above them, the buy prices drop