I usually rely on community scrap buckets at every dig I attend, but I still ended up bringing some scrap home with me. Realistically, what kind of payout could I expect for a 45-liter tub filled with iron, lead, and other scrap metals? Should I hang onto it and take it to a local scrap yard, or is the return so low that I might as well throw it into the community bucket at the next dig?
What to do with all this scrap
- fred
- Posts: 18768
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2014 6:15 pm
- Location: Kent
- Has thanked: 6753 times
- Been thanked: 14820 times
The iron is worth bugger all in small quantities so best take it to the recycling centre next time you go.
Lead is currently about £1 a kilo, brass £3 and copper £5 but it varies from place to place and with the world markets. It needs to be separated into different metals and fairly free from dirt as mixed metals attract a much lower price. Scrap merchants may not take just a few kilos, better to get a bucketful.
Lead is currently about £1 a kilo, brass £3 and copper £5 but it varies from place to place and with the world markets. It needs to be separated into different metals and fairly free from dirt as mixed metals attract a much lower price. Scrap merchants may not take just a few kilos, better to get a bucketful.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
- Phil2401
- Posts: 9212
- Joined: Sun Dec 04, 2016 3:31 pm
- Location: Surrey, originally Yorkshire
- Has thanked: 5615 times
- Been thanked: 4654 times
Fred as always gives the sensible answer to the question, but it just gave me a random thought about 'hedge fodder' - field boundaries change over the years, hedges are uprooted and new fields thus created. Thinking of all the junk I've chucked into hedges (as I'm sure have many others), some poor detectorist in the future will be finding all sorts of little 'treasures' and wondering why they are all in a straight line...
Maybe I need to go and do something useful instead of sitting here writing rubbish!
Phil
Maybe I need to go and do something useful instead of sitting here writing rubbish!
Phil
Quaerite et invenietis
- MilitaryMetalMagnut
- Posts: 1272
- Joined: Fri Dec 19, 2014 12:43 pm
- Location: East Devon
- Has thanked: 463 times
- Been thanked: 1456 times
A small amount of iron scrap is probably better chucked into the metals skip at the local recycling centre, that’s what I do with that sort of thing. I find lots and lots of brass cartridges (I look on a WW2 training site that’s still in use for training exercises), and I usually wait until I have at least 40/45 kilos worth of brass before going to the scrappy.
Best regards,
Simon
Best regards,
Simon
18 years experience of collecting, researching military ordnance and weaponry!
-
- Posts: 771
- Joined: Mon Jan 09, 2023 12:01 pm
- Location: South Coast
- Has thanked: 412 times
- Been thanked: 659 times
I have two containers one I use for lead the other for copper and brass which I separate and clean up a bit when full. Iron to the dump. It takes me ages to get a decent amount to scrap but why chuck it when it will get you a few pints and a curry!!...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests