Those cast light fixtures, just "SMASH for CASH" That's what I'm talking about. 😂 Interesting to hear the stories about your early years working for that company and all the drama. Napoleon was a funny nick name for that guy. Have a good week Derek.
In a world without flatheadscrews a flatheadscrewdriver would be priceless, now what would you use for poking and a prowding and chiselling? I hate them to but this thought keeps me accepting and dealing with those devillish things. Love this kinda vidjeos!
Could you amagine what it was like back in the day when a house was built by hand ? No power tools . Everything was flatheads . Twisting a screwdriver all day long . Those guys must have had forearms like poppeye .
Hey, great story. Thanks for sharing. I hate bosses like that. They cost the company $15 trying to save a buck. Old saw blades for your best guy, what a dummy.
In the end you always demolish but for yourself. Ah those damn flat head screws, what a nightmare! Fortunately, Oliver helps you a lot, he will quickly learn metal sorting from you.
Have you ever thought of getting industrial shredder to break any/everything down to bits? It seems like it would save time and space when going to scrapyard.
There are a ton of commercial options in terms of size/capacity. But the time spent planning on fitting/bundling/transport would be eliminated. Chuck into shredder collect in barrels and deliver. You would have to build a stand and collection unit etc but those things chew up everything.
I saw the lights in the trailer and thought “TRANSFORMERS!”..due to the lack of lately 😂. Sucks that everything has to be made with cheap aluminum these days..maybe we can go back to copper when WW3 sends us back to the stone age. I found a chonky copper transformer inside of an old stereo receiver from 1973 yesterday and almost screamed..been a long minute for me lol. I almost want to keep it :s.
Great story :-) Man if I took a load of aluminum like that to the yards up here in Wisconsin. All they would pay is aluminum breakage .10¢ a pound. You are lucky down there!
@@thescrapmeister I sell to an exporter and they sell directly to the mill. So if there there was a problem with the iron in the cast they would tell me.
Back in Kentucky we used corncobs too we had two bushels in the out house. you see we had white corn cobs and we had red corn cobs. And what you would do is you would use a red corn cob then you would use a white corn cob to see if you needed another red one. Don't you just love a good history lesson?????
A Gallon of mercury is 27 pounds, X $250 / lb = $6750.00 Obviously a whole sale / scrap price would be less. To contain the mercury break the pods under water, so it can't oxidize or vaporize.
The workers around here don't like fast workers because they reduce the overall money they can make on a specific job. They all want to work longer not harder lol. They drag it out so they can suck up the governments money here.
Isn't it great when stuff doesn't have to go back together again ever
Yes! 😂😂
Just an idea. Call the jaws of life. Libby lol 😆 love you videos. Been watching you for 4 years. Good luck and be safe. Peace to All
Thanks for the suggestion and for being a long time watcher. 👊
Derrick angry Derick smash. ..LOL... Sometimes it is the best stress therapy there is smash scrapping.
😂😂😂
You should wear an apron or a tool pouch and keep them biznitches on ya!
Thanks for the suggestion
Those cast light fixtures, just "SMASH for CASH" That's what I'm talking about. 😂 Interesting to hear the stories about your early years working for that company and all the drama. Napoleon was a funny nick name for that guy. Have a good week Derek.
😂😂😂 Thanks man same to you 👊
In a world without flatheadscrews a flatheadscrewdriver would be priceless, now what would you use for poking and a prowding and chiselling?
I hate them to but this thought keeps me accepting and dealing with those devillish things.
Love this kinda vidjeos!
My 2nd favorite scrapping tool is a flat head. I basically use it for prying. lol
Could you amagine what it was like back in the day when a house was built by hand ? No power tools . Everything was flatheads . Twisting a screwdriver all day long . Those guys must have had forearms like poppeye .
There was no flatheads in those days. It was all done by tender and mortar. So I don't know where you get your flatheads😂
😂😂😂
oh hell yes i love it when you just smash stuff up to get that money ha ha ha i sure do like smashing things too get my money too thanks for sharing
Thanks!
Hey, great story. Thanks for sharing. I hate bosses like that. They cost the company $15 trying to save a buck. Old saw blades for your best guy, what a dummy.
Thanks, I actually miss working that job.
I'm big fans of your youtube.
Thanks!
Keep on making videos.
Great scrapping video you are the best
Thanks!
Interesting history, great breakdowns. Keep doing it buddy😊
Thanks 👍
In the end you always demolish but for yourself. Ah those damn flat head screws, what a nightmare!
Fortunately, Oliver helps you a lot, he will quickly learn metal sorting from you.
Thanks! 👊
Just love your youtube much love
Thanks!
the current mercury price is about $1 = 1 gram 1kilo is about $1000, 1 kilo is = to about 2 lbs, 1lb is about $500.
Nice! 👍
How much would you want for some of those corn cob lights?
I was gonna put them on my website for $10 plus shipping. I will test them before listing and before shipping.
Why don't you recycle the glass?
Because I tried and the dump just throws it in the land fill. lol
Is there a fisheye lens on the camera?
Wide-angle
Only on the time laps camera. I'm still figuring out the new GoPro it has a different setup
good morning from Yorkshire!
Same to you! 😂
"On today's Project Shop, I sort out the MOUNTAIN of Stainless I've collected over the years. It'll be part 1 of a 27-part series."
I don't hold scrap for more than a few days. lol
😂😂
@@ProjectShopFl Except we see you set aside all that stainless hardware bolts and nuts. I'm still waiting to see where all that's been piling up. ;2)
Smashing those lights is therapudic. People pay good money to do that.
😂😂😂😂
you need to give Oliver a shirt.
He has one I gave him but he does not want to ruin it.
Have you ever thought of getting industrial shredder to break any/everything down to bits? It seems like it would save time and space when going to scrapyard.
Yes, I think I am gonna make one.
There are a ton of commercial options in terms of size/capacity. But the time spent planning on fitting/bundling/transport would be eliminated. Chuck into shredder collect in barrels and deliver. You would have to build a stand and collection unit etc but those things chew up everything.
I saw the lights in the trailer and thought “TRANSFORMERS!”..due to the lack of lately 😂. Sucks that everything has to be made with cheap aluminum these days..maybe we can go back to copper when WW3 sends us back to the stone age.
I found a chonky copper transformer inside of an old stereo receiver from 1973 yesterday and almost screamed..been a long minute for me lol. I almost want to keep it :s.
I miss the days of 55 gal drums of copper transformers.
Great story :-) Man if I took a load of aluminum like that to the yards up here in Wisconsin. All they would pay is aluminum breakage .10¢ a pound. You are lucky down there!
That sucks! You are aloud 3% iron in the cast.
@@ProjectShopFl I'm going to have to ask my yard :-)
@@thescrapmeister I sell to an exporter and they sell directly to the mill. So if there there was a problem with the iron in the cast they would tell me.
Back in Kentucky we used corncobs too we had two bushels in the out house. you see we had white corn cobs and we had red corn cobs. And what you would do is you would use a red corn cob then you would use a white corn cob to see if you needed another red one.
Don't you just love a good history lesson?????
That's the best story in a TH-cam comment section that i've seen in a long time.
Thanks for sharing
10:36 ahahahahhaahha
😂😂😂😂
How much you pay that Oliver guy he is cute bu the way 😂
He makes out ok, I will let him know you said that. lol
Law's on possession of Mercury is worth investigating. I had an amount of mercury for my job and had to carry paperwork on the truck for the Mercury
Wow! What were you using the Mercury for?
Mercury on amazon is $245 for 1 lbs
Thanks!
Fun fact...one gallon of mercury weighs 113.5 lbs!! 😲😂
Wow! Thanks for sharing. I need a 55 gal drum of it.lol
$2 966 per gallon. So, 3K is near enough. Personally I wouldn't touch it
😂
😂 Nice!
Maybe $1200 per gallon for Hg
👍👍
HA HA HA HA
👍👍
why do you throw capacitors in trash we get irony aluminium for them
I will check my non ferrous yard but the steel yard does not take them.
A Gallon of mercury is 27 pounds, X $250 / lb = $6750.00 Obviously a whole sale / scrap price would be less. To contain the mercury break the pods under water, so it can't oxidize or vaporize.
Thanks for the idea I will try that.
Why is there different categories of aluminium? Cast,sheet etc
It’s all aluminium regardless once it’s melted.
They are different alloys. Some are pure and some have other metals in it.
What did you do to the image 🤬fisheye lens? It's unwatchable 🤬like I'm wasted and can't focus 🤣🤣🤣
I have to check the setting on the GoPro.
The workers around here don't like fast workers because they reduce the overall money they can make on a specific job. They all want to work longer not harder lol. They drag it out so they can suck up the governments money here.
It's not the government's money it's your money. lol
@@ProjectShopFl exactly :P
😂👍👍👍👍