silversaddle1 wrote:When we first started out scrapping we were always pressed for room to stockpile scrap. I always liked to pile the copper up but clean wire takes up a lot of room. So I made a compactor for copper wire. I took a 3 foot long piece of 4x4 inch square tubing and made a removable plug for one end of it. It was just pinned in place and quickly removed. Then I had a piece of 1 1/2" solid barstock as a packer (ram). It was about 4 feet long. Simple enough. You would cram the burnt or stripped wire in the tube and pack it down and just keep adding untill you had a 8 inch long "brick" of wire in the tube. Pull the pin on the plate, grab a 2x4 and knock out the brick. Start stacking!
Recyclersteve wrote:silversaddle1 wrote:When we first started out scrapping we were always pressed for room to stockpile scrap. I always liked to pile the copper up but clean wire takes up a lot of room. So I made a compactor for copper wire. I took a 3 foot long piece of 4x4 inch square tubing and made a removable plug for one end of it. It was just pinned in place and quickly removed. Then I had a piece of 1 1/2" solid barstock as a packer (ram). It was about 4 feet long. Simple enough. You would cram the burnt or stripped wire in the tube and pack it down and just keep adding untill you had a 8 inch long "brick" of wire in the tube. Pull the pin on the plate, grab a 2x4 and knock out the brick. Start stacking!
I'd love to see a photo or two of this.
hobo finds wrote:Cant sell stripped wire here unless you have a business license
silversaddle1 wrote:When we first started out scrapping we were always pressed for room to stockpile scrap. I always liked to pile the copper up but clean wire takes up a lot of room. So I made a compactor for copper wire. I took a 3 foot long piece of 4x4 inch square tubing and made a removable plug for one end of it. It was just pinned in place and quickly removed. Then I had a piece of 1 1/2" solid barstock as a packer (ram). It was about 4 feet long. Simple enough. You would cram the burnt or stripped wire in the tube and pack it down and just keep adding untill you had a 8 inch long "brick" of wire in the tube. Pull the pin on the plate, grab a 2x4 and knock out the brick. Start stacking!
Shazbot57 wrote:I was thinking about consolidating my old copper into bars or ingots using a homemade forge and some muffin tins. You can make one from an old propane tank, refractory cement and an old fire extinguisher or sona-tube. There are lots of how to videos on you tube to make these pretty cheaply. They're also usable for melting aluminum. Bars and ingots as you know stack nicely! Of course you may reduce the size of copper (or aluminum) into bars or ingots, but then you have another problem of needing space to store the homemade forge.
DaMangRon wrote:hobo finds wrote:Cant sell stripped wire here unless you have a business license
You can sell it to me! Or Ebay.
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