Ireland_925 wrote:This may have been addressed before, so sorry if I'm asking something already answered.
When it comes to gas grills, if the lid is non-magnetic and has the black/dark grey finish (not stainless), does that mean it is cast aluminum or could it be some other kind of low-grade steel? If it is aluminum, do you usually separate the lid from the frame when taking it to the scrapyard? And can anyone give me a rough estimate on what a grill with the aluminum lid would bring as opposed to what a stainless one would bring.
Thanks in advance for any help. I have several grills I can scrap and was trying to get a basic idea how to prep them for scrapping.
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selling a grill for scrap metal:
The grill lid is cast aluminum/pot medal. (low grade steel is magnetic) You need to separate it from the frame to get payed cast price for it, which is definitely worth it. There are two ways to do it. There are usually two pins that hold the top part of the grill on, and they have snap rings securing them. Pull off the snap rings, and hit the pins out, and the top part of the grill just falls off. The bottom of the grill is usually held on with some bolts or what not. These may be a pain to get out as they often are rusty, ect.
The other way is to just hit it with a 5 pound hammer continuously at the connection points until the cast breaks off. This usually leaves a little bit of cast on the steel frame, but generally is much quicker.
As far as price brought in, every grill is different. I'll tell you what to pull off though!
The gas regulator that is part of the gas line between the grill and the to the tank is cast zinc/brass. My yard pays close to dirty brass price for it. The regulator knobs are brass, so take the time to pull those off. If it is a higher end grill, it will have stainless on it, but sometimes it is so little that is ends up being more of a hassle to take it off then it is worth (thin stainless sheeting).
You can only scrap the tank if you drill a hole in it or cut it in half/open.