AGgressive Metal wrote:Always think in terms of the non-ferrous metal content. Is there lead, copper, brass, aluminum, etc? I imagine some parts have different metals in them depending on age, model, and manufacturer. Any way you can break down component metals will boost your return, ie #2 copper and junk steel separately pay out better than "copper with steel" category, etc.
Recyclersteve wrote:It seems like a lot of wheel covers now are plastic and used to be aluminum. Is that correct?
P.S. I had about 10 or so that I took to a couple places that deal in them and neither one wanted any of them at any price. What a shame.
I totally agree on core vs. scrap value.Dr. Cadmium wrote:Core value for any auto part is almost always more than scrap value.
Assuming no core or collectible value, the most valuable scrap parts of a car are:
catalytic converters
alloy rims
lead batteries
The people I know who scrap cars for a living or side business usually only pull these items, sometimes just the first one.
Other items like radiators and wiring harness are worth far more than steel, but they are time consuming to extract.
Alternators and starters can be sold as scrap electric motors even if they have no core value. By weight they are worth about 3x as much as light iron/scrap cars.
Many newer cars have more aluminum parts like the hood, which should also be separated from your steel.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests