How much can you make scrapping electric motors? (A lot).

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 167

  • @gregott2011
    @gregott2011 Год назад +25

    I just found your channel and am very impressed at how hard you work to produce some very interesting content! When I was a kid, a long time ago, my friends and I would ride our bikes around and pick up empty pop bottles that people threw out along the road. They had a 2 cent deposit value when returned to a grocery store or gas station. That's not much for one, but we made enough to keep us supplied with Coke or Sun Drop all summer. Your effort and persistence are key to your success. Stay safe and keep up the good work.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +2

      Thanks for the kind words! If you know what sundrop is you may not be very far from me haha.

    • @gregott2011
      @gregott2011 Год назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 I grew up in central PA in a town 40 miles south of Penn State called Orbisonia. I loved my Sundrop. Living near Staunton, VA now.

  • @garethmccullough390
    @garethmccullough390 10 месяцев назад +3

    Love this video great detail from start to finish. Love the day turned to night when you were burning the casings off, and damn !! That guillotine !! Amazing ! 😻

  • @Letsdoittv67
    @Letsdoittv67 Год назад +5

    I used to just scrap big items like fridges washing machines etc, now I’m watching your channel (and a few others) getting the knowledge down. Appreciate the video very educational!

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +2

      Thanks! I definitely recommend anything having to do with copper bearing scrap materials like wire, motors, electrical gear, HVAC, etc. You will make much more money with much less work. The downside being it usually requires some initial investment unlike with ferrous scrap. Good luck!

  • @ricardoderobles9494
    @ricardoderobles9494 Год назад +3

    I do the same thing cleaning out the electronic motor. But I like you set up. Cool. From Houston Texas.

  • @JackofHaulTrades
    @JackofHaulTrades 7 месяцев назад +1

    Your tools definitely made the job easier. I don't have the tools you have, so I might just end up selling mine as is...Great video brother

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  7 месяцев назад +1

      If you don't have a machine to dismantle them you are way better off selling them whole. Thanks for watching.

    • @JackofHaulTrades
      @JackofHaulTrades 7 месяцев назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 agreed 🤝

  • @jesseelder8606
    @jesseelder8606 Год назад +3

    I also just found your channel. Man you do some awesome stuff!!

  • @ScrapDaddy365
    @ScrapDaddy365 2 месяца назад

    New subscriber here 🙋🏻‍♂️ Great video!!! I love your setup for removing the windings! That's genius!

  • @lewiemcneely9143
    @lewiemcneely9143 Год назад +3

    All I can say is you sure earned it nd more! BLESSINGS!

  • @DumpsterMarcus
    @DumpsterMarcus 5 месяцев назад

    Good payday!! loved your whole scrapping setup!!!

  • @redrum2612
    @redrum2612 Год назад +4

    Awesome video! That's one heck of a piece of machinery you've got there too! 🧲 ♻️ ✌️

  • @bigcountryscrapper6885
    @bigcountryscrapper6885 Год назад +2

    New friend here great work and video

  • @scrapitjc
    @scrapitjc Год назад +4

    Great breakdown video and estimated cost for process and recovery. All around great job.

  • @AlanBurnham
    @AlanBurnham Год назад +1

    Nice to see you finally over 1k subscribers!

  • @lincolnbates13
    @lincolnbates13 3 месяца назад +2

    Invest in a gas powered Chop saw. It will save you the grief and energy to take cast off the big cast cased motors. Trust me from a fellow scrapper. It will be worth the weight of gold.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  3 месяца назад

      That's a good idea. A buddy of mine has one I could borrow.

  • @peterforan5982
    @peterforan5982 Год назад +3

    Impressive video 👍

  • @ScorpionMetals
    @ScorpionMetals Год назад +1

    Good video

  • @EconomicBearish
    @EconomicBearish Год назад +1

    pretty cool that guillotine for cutting steel and take out the copper.

  • @michaelwillcutt2619
    @michaelwillcutt2619 Год назад +1

    Plasma in scraping is best tool ever I’ve had mine since the early nineties

  • @katough
    @katough Год назад +3

    You built the perfect electric motor tear down station and you're 'checking to see if it's worth it"

  • @msafilakhani5304
    @msafilakhani5304 Год назад +1

    I want full video of that stator cutting matching...btw loved your video

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Thanks. This video has some more information on it.
      ruclips.net/video/J89yAawcWs8/видео.html

    • @msafilakhani5304
      @msafilakhani5304 Год назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 thank you ❤️

  • @theEmpireofdirt
    @theEmpireofdirt Год назад +2

    I buy AC motors because they’re all the same size. The compressor windings are mostly the same size 2 I always figured $1000 a day you can buy these motors from AC companies that scrap their own units if you go around and ask most of them sell them whole to the scrap yard so you can buy them for a decent deal. And it’s a fairly steady supply I’m in Florida but I typically pay two dollars for a fan motor and five dollars for a compressor i pay by the piece. Because it’s simpler.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Thanks very much for the info. Having a homogeneous motor supply is a big advantage. I also noticed the air con motors were the easiest to process. Both the fan and compressor motors stripped, cut, and pulled quicker and easier than the others. Although the compressor casings were a challenge for me.

  • @jwall6006
    @jwall6006 4 месяца назад +4

    What scrapers never include is what was the initial cost of the motors. You didn’t take that off of the $606 which would have changed your per hour money.

    • @scotthoward4836
      @scotthoward4836 3 месяца назад +1

      That's if he paid for them or even some of them he might ve got them all free. The other costs to consider are electricity to run the power tools and cutting wheels

    • @bluejay3369
      @bluejay3369 Месяц назад

      That's why I use battery operating power tools​@scotthoward4836

  • @stjimtemyth995
    @stjimtemyth995 Год назад +1

    thanks interesting gilotine machine, and nice new use for the plasma ,looks like you nedd to make the blade travel deeper either by raising your v base or cutting a slot for the blade to pass into.also can you use the hydralic system to smash the cast iron cases.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Thanks. Yeah either making a slot for the blade to fit into or just getting it closer the the anvil would help it cut completely through every time. You probably could crush through the cast iron cases with the press but those motors were so heavy it was easier to just leave them where they were and smash them with a hammer lol.

  • @WINPHCHANNEL
    @WINPHCHANNEL Год назад +1

    I support your channel more learning ...

  • @ScrapFatherScrapSon
    @ScrapFatherScrapSon Год назад +3

    Can’t believe you only have 800 subscribers! You’ve got some awesome setup there! How did you get the Birds Eye view at the scrap yard? Drone?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +2

      Hey thanks that means a lot! Yes that was shot with a DJI Mini 3 Pro set on 1080p 60fps I believe.

  • @midamcmullen6385
    @midamcmullen6385 Месяц назад

    Do you think if you taking that metal piece that goes across when your body goes down if you make a cut in the middle of it that way your body can goes all the way down and cut all the way through

  • @sk31370n
    @sk31370n Год назад +3

    my local scrappies in euroland currently pay 2.1 times more for electric motors and copper 2 is a bit cheaper which means here its almost 0 profit to do what you did.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Yeah you would be better off selling them whole in that case.

  • @grog2534
    @grog2534 8 месяцев назад +1

    Do you but the motors off the scrapyard and then sell the scrap back to the same yard or do you sorce them some other way.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  8 месяцев назад +1

      I have not bought any from the scrapyard I doubt that would be very profitable. I just get them here and there from random people who have them saved up usually.

  • @ilikechamp3086
    @ilikechamp3086 Год назад +2

    hello I've been collecting a lot of motors. Plasma work efficiency is good

  • @Utubeisazzho
    @Utubeisazzho Год назад +1

    Try a log splitter for the cast ones rather than beating them with a hammer

  • @frerecampbell9291
    @frerecampbell9291 Год назад +1

    I've subscribed, I was hoping to see you extract the copper wire after cutting the stator in half. Thanks for sharing.

    • @sodatab_
      @sodatab_ Год назад

      An air hammer with chisel end makes quick work of this part

  • @Justicesdad
    @Justicesdad Год назад +3

    You + respirator = 🥇

    • @evanknight3629
      @evanknight3629 4 месяца назад

      You aren't lying, I cut open like 200 metal halide transformers the other night for the first time without a respirator and when I got in the shower I was blowing black boogers out my nose from cutting dust, will definitely wear one from now on

  • @nachostuff
    @nachostuff Год назад

    Who built your splitter/puller? I would love to have something like that. Makes short work of the project.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      I did. I showed some details here.
      ruclips.net/video/J89yAawcWs8/видео.html

  • @adamdannenhauer5464
    @adamdannenhauer5464 Год назад +1

    Would you share your plans for your stator cutter and puller. And everything you need to make it.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      Sorry there are no plans to speak of I just kinda built it as I went along. But if you watch this video I discuss it a bit starting at 8:14
      ruclips.net/video/J89yAawcWs8/видео.html

  • @JohnBuck-rb3pi
    @JohnBuck-rb3pi 7 месяцев назад

    Considering copper was was paying four bucks a pound for number two you did good.

  • @williamwahlert8414
    @williamwahlert8414 Год назад

    nice copper motor puller do you have a video of the build or a materials list?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Yes you can see more info on it here ruclips.net/video/J89yAawcWs8/видео.html

  • @PhilipRomeo69
    @PhilipRomeo69 Год назад +1

    Nice job

  • @nightscrapperuk13
    @nightscrapperuk13 Год назад +1

    the plasma cutter is ok for sealed units i.e fridge or ac compressors. I would of used a 9inch grinder to cut through all the outer casings would of saved you time ,great machine you have to split the stators in half and I liked the winding puller ,how did you get the camera angle looking down at you that was great and great video very educational and informative, new subscriber here from England and I hope you get some more electric moters ,awesome payout for your time and effort 👍

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      I just set the camera on top of a step ladder lol. Yeah next time I'll try using a bigger better grinder on some cases and see how it compares to the plasma. Thanks for watching!

  • @ScrappingwithGrandpa
    @ScrappingwithGrandpa Год назад +1

    Where did you get that machine that you’re cutting the motors in half with or did you build it?

  • @danieldecoteau8879
    @danieldecoteau8879 Год назад +1

    Yo nice press,cut some some slots in the holding plates for the blade to pass all the way threw,but yo nice

  • @testy518
    @testy518 Год назад +2

    All the electric motors have copper armatures in them. Copper's worth a lot of money!!

  • @nickimpala8886
    @nickimpala8886 Год назад +1

    Very safe or terrifying lol sweet man wish i had the time and skill and build something like that

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Haha thanks. It's really not as hard as it looks.

  • @watahyahknow
    @watahyahknow Год назад +1

    for getting the cores out of the cast iron casings , might need to use the hudraulic ram and push the core out through one of the ends after getting the end casings off , probably the fastest way to do it though those motors are pretty heavy , maibe mount a ram sideways on the table so you can roll the motor in between the ram and anvil set at an universal height (use blocks to make the ram put force across the centerpiece of the motor
    as for cutting the cores in half : it might help if you have a slit in the anvil for the knife in the hydraulic press to pass through should make it eazier to cut all the way through the tin pack
    friend of mine was taking apart smaller motors cutting them in half with a grinder and used a piece of roundbar to hammer the copper out one groove at a time , did some time calculations and basicly he wouldve made more money for the time and materials spend if he took on a paper route , that pulling device to get the copper out is a huge time saver
    youre calculation (and percentage) should make it viable to buy the complete motors from other (lazy) scrappers and have them delivered to you , and take them apart for the profit , make it interesting for them by paying a little over the price the yard pays them
    yes the margin is smaller but you make up for that in saving fuel running aroun d picking those motors up where you can find them
    theres someone i know that buys central heating stuff (often demo the central heating in place and clean the space up as part of the deal) he makes a pretty good living of it , doesnt pay a lot of taxes as most of the income from scrap cannot be traced too well (even though the taxman and the unimployment agency both are known to check the licence plates on cars bringing scrap to the yard ) he has a few people working for him doing the heavy lifting and stuff getting payed under the table
    he going to get caught one of these days but untill then hes fat and happy

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      The issue I have found with pressing the stators out of the housings is that it's very easy to deform them in the process and then they won't cut worth a darn in the guillotine. To do it right you would really need to make custom tooling for the particular motor you want to scrap and that's not feasible unless they're all the exact same.
      A lot of those motors actually came from a scrapper friend of mine. I should hit him up and see if he has any more saved up. There's good money in HVAC scrap for sure.
      That's funny about your friend. Tell him if he starts grossing enough to file a return but just claim everything he spends money on as a business expense and then he won't have to pay hardly anything in taxes. That's how big businesses do it!

  • @moondog4313
    @moondog4313 Год назад +1

    Just wondering but did you calculate the gas for the plasma and electricity?

  • @cccorvette
    @cccorvette Год назад +2

    Did you include the initial cost of the motors in you calculations? Very interesting video.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +6

      No. The initial price for the motors, and all the other prices, will be different for everyone. I just wanted to give an example of the value increase one could realize in my particular market. I actually paid 17 cents per pound for those motors so I made about 10% less than what I said in the video. The main point is the copper content of an average motor, as that's the only thing that will be more or less constant for everyone.

  • @Metalscrapm
    @Metalscrapm 8 месяцев назад

    Hello, what is the price of el motors?
    Lb/kg and car generators scrap?
    Maybe you know trusted whosale?

  • @thesheff79
    @thesheff79 10 месяцев назад +1

    Really love your setup. I scrap also, just started. My scrap channel is ( copper eye joe)

  • @XM202LadyTrucker
    @XM202LadyTrucker Год назад +1

    I AM IN L❤VE!!!!! With your guillotine. 🥰😍😘 Springs my dear to stabilize the extra movement? Leaf springs on the bottom, "regular" springs like you see on shocks up top, and please no side to side movements or your poor hydraulic arm will bend and make you 😢.

  • @zube6996
    @zube6996 Год назад +3

    Just came across your channel. Great content. A couple of questions. Did you have to pay anything to get the motors? And did you take into account the time collecting the motors and time you spent at scrap yard? Again a great video. I have subscribed.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +2

      Yes I paid 17 cents/lb for those motors. That was a bit too much but I paid it because I was excited to try this out lol. I only accounted for time spent tearing them down. I think I spent about 6 additional hours getting them (again way too long). And I think that trip to the scrap yard took about an hour and a half in total.
      Thanks for watching!

    • @dansw0rkshop
      @dansw0rkshop Год назад +1

      @@AlwaysBored123 The scrap yard near me won't sell anything it seems. :(

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      @@dansw0rkshop Most scrapyards won't sell to the public. You have to hunt around to find one that does. I'm fortune to have two nearby that sell stuff and even luckier that one of them deals largely in salvaged structural steel for cheap.

  • @chrisbullen4340
    @chrisbullen4340 Год назад +1

    I’d love to build the splitter and puller any chance you could sell me and other subscribers plans to build them
    Kind regards Chris

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Sorry but I really don't have any plans and honestly wouldn't know how to make them. I'd be happy to answer any specific questions you have about them though.

  • @scraprodriguez
    @scraprodriguez Год назад +1

    AWESOME! 🤙🏼

  • @wesley00042
    @wesley00042 Год назад +1

    Can you make that blade hotswappable with a large essentially nut splitter tool?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      I'm not sure. That AR400 is definitely not hard enough to cut a steel nut.

    • @wesley00042
      @wesley00042 Год назад +1

      @@AlwaysBored123 I was thinking for cracking those cast iron motor cases

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      @@wesley00042 Oh yeah I'm sure something could be rigged up like that. I'll definitely try it if I get more cast iron ones.

  • @BoostedMooseGarage
    @BoostedMooseGarage Год назад

    how has the ar400 plate been working have you changed it or broke it yet how many more motors have you ripped apart not part of the video?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      I actually have not processed any more since making that video. I did get a small load in but nearly all of them worked so I just sold them complete to people. If/when I do another batch I will make an update video.

  • @n.b.p.davenport7066
    @n.b.p.davenport7066 Год назад +1

    I took a bunch of old Motors to a flea market, sold them all in a half a day, people love those old motors for their circular saws and whatever else , drill presses. If they work don't scrap them.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Yeah I recently got another much smaller load of small motors like this. They were all three phase but nearly all of them worked so I sold them for a little over scrap value. Far less work doing that than cutting them up.

  • @McMenaminLawGroupP.A.JohnMcMen

    Where do you obtain these items ?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Facebook marketplace the vast majority of the time.

  • @raymondmoore6049
    @raymondmoore6049 Год назад

    You said if you ran across a good deal on more of the motors? How much did it cost you to grab those motors in this video and what does that make your hourly rate after you include the cost of the motors?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      I honestly do not remember. My hourly rate came out to a little bit less than I said it did I think. The important part is the breakdown by weight. Call around to some scrapyards to see what they're paying and you can get a good idea of what you could make per hour doing this.

    • @raymondmoore6049
      @raymondmoore6049 Год назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 appreciate it, I’ve been trying to find places to buy bulk motors/compressors on the cheap cheap so I can do this. Is there a percentage I should shoot for? Say if my scrap price is .30 cents/lb for scrap motors, maybe offer them 10-15% of that?

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      @@raymondmoore6049 I'd be very surprised if anyone with scrap motors would sell them for 10-15% of what they're worth but if you can get them that cheap go for it lol. It's more likely you will have to pay scrap price, or a little less, and make your money by tearing them down like I did in the vid. HVAC repair, electric motor shops, and industrial maintenance contractors are where I'd start if I was looking for a steady supply of motors. You can also offer to buy motors from other scrapers that otherwise turn them in whole. Good luck!

    • @raymondmoore6049
      @raymondmoore6049 Год назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 really do appreciate the information

  • @Just_Chuck_It
    @Just_Chuck_It 10 месяцев назад

    How much did the motors cost to acquire? I am assuming you bought them from the scrap yard as motors.
    So, once you subtract the cost of the raw motors what is your true net profit?
    The way I have found to best profit from motors is to collect them via the scrap pickup process. Every appliance has a motor some of them can be quite large.
    I scrap everything out when I process my scrap load. If I pickup 6 washer dryer combos I dismantle them and separate out the steel, wire, aluminum, and motors.
    Motors go into a bin. When the bin is full I process.
    Through the process of scrapping I find I can make about $800 - $1000 per week (depending on my level of commitment and availability of scrap) with a once a month cash in of copper windings and insulated copper wire.
    But, there is no way I would pay for scrap to break down. Because if you paid $600 for that like if motors, there went your profit. You basically broke even with your time and use of resources (fuel, electricity, cutting discs, ECT. ).

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  10 месяцев назад

      I want to say I paid about $350 for those motors but I cannot remember tbh. I'm sure the real number is buried here in the comments somewhere. The vast majority of them came from a defunct bowling alley. They were the motors used to run the pinsetters and ball returns. I didn't buy any from the scrapyard. That would probably cost too much to make this worthwhile.
      In my experience appliance motors usually have aluminum windings which aren't worth processing at all. But not always.
      I used to be totally against paying for scrap too. But once you see the profit you can make on copper-bearing materials I bet you'll change your mind. Just don't pay more than a scrapyard would and you'll be fine.

  • @strydyrhellzrydyr1345
    @strydyrhellzrydyr1345 Год назад +1

    I think copper.. is like 3.60 a pound where I am.. an aluminum.. just went down from .45 a pound.. to .40.
    What was your aluminum

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Don't remember exactly but I think cast aluminum was 40 cents/lb and irony aluminum was 15 cents/lb.

  • @bigcountryscrapper6885
    @bigcountryscrapper6885 Год назад +1

    I really would like to build that copper winding puller would make my life so much easyer lol

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +2

      The puller was honestly super easy to make. Only thing I would do different is use roller chain to keep the chains from tangling up which is a slight problem I have with it.
      One thing that helps quite a bit is warming the stater halves up with something to soften the coating on the windings. I did this on about the coldest day of winter so that was definitely working against me lol.

    • @bigcountryscrapper6885
      @bigcountryscrapper6885 Год назад +1

      @@AlwaysBored123 thanks for the info

  • @garrettlee4293
    @garrettlee4293 Год назад +1

    i need that chopper to show my daughters dates what will happen if they hurt her feelings but damn it i would love to have a few of those motors

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Gotta love copper-bearing scrap. Just have to keep looking and you'll find it before long.

  • @CanadianTreasureHunter
    @CanadianTreasureHunter Год назад +1

    Big cast motors are mostly iron & If you buy the steel motors out of HVAC or small cast motors have the best yield for copper, Your copper weight was low, They might of docked you for all the plastic with your copper & you lost at least 40 pounds from the big scale

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Very interesting. It did seem like the smaller motors had a higher percentage of copper but that was just intuition. I didn't actually measure anything individually. And yeah they got one over on me when I let them weigh it on the truck scale. I actually was about to unload the copper at the small scale and the guy gave me some bs about it only being good to like 100lbs. Next time I'll get a more accurate weight. They didn't say anything about the plastic though.

  • @BobTheBreaker9
    @BobTheBreaker9 Год назад +1

    That is good money but the gas money to aquire all that is probably a killer

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      I figure I probably spent about $50-$70 in fuel going to get them. Most of them came from one place.

  • @waseemahmed8489
    @waseemahmed8489 8 месяцев назад

    Nice thanks

  • @bradleyshimels3253
    @bradleyshimels3253 Год назад +1

    I see a greener planet !

  • @joesask857
    @joesask857 Год назад +1

    thanks man

  • @PatNosack
    @PatNosack Год назад

    Just have to say when you have that many, you could just take them in as is and you'd make out.

  • @scrapmanindustries
    @scrapmanindustries 4 месяца назад

    I’m gonna buy another load of compressors here soon. At least I know my math was correct.

  • @steveciarico9824
    @steveciarico9824 Год назад +1

    If you scrap ac compressors... The number of pounds of copper by weight is 0.0644744

  • @ratrod-oj9ji
    @ratrod-oj9ji Год назад +1

    Next time save them you can make other things with them if they still work and sell them for more money than what you would get for scraping them

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      You would think that but the guy I got them from tried to sell them for months with no success. Most of them were fractional horsepower and/or three phase making them kinda useless. I did save a few that looked good though.

  • @ScrapDaddy365
    @ScrapDaddy365 2 месяца назад

    Do it again??? I'd do it every day if i could find enough motors🤣🤣🤣

  • @sidschwan8031
    @sidschwan8031 Год назад

    Hi im looking at the barrel and it was 95 percent full that should have been at least 380 lbs you got ripped off and the big unit you got in Copper, i scraped 3 motors and had 40 lbs of copper #2

  • @D4m4g3d
    @D4m4g3d Год назад +1

    i wouldnt even know where to get junk electric motors.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      They're not the easiest things to find in large quantities.

  • @michaelwillcutt2619
    @michaelwillcutt2619 Год назад +1

    I wouldn’t get number two because all the plastic pieces in your scrap

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Yeah some yards will complain about that. I just go to ones that don't.

  • @ScrappingWithDave
    @ScrappingWithDave Год назад

    This is the kind of guy you simply don't f*ck with...

  • @monicakritner8577
    @monicakritner8577 Год назад

    So in reality you actually did it the hard way also because I watched the entire show I never saw you use the plasma cutter again

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Huh? I used the plasma on any motor that had a sheet metal casing. The cast iron cases I cut with a grinder and/or smashed off with a hammer. It's not very obvious on the timelapse though.

  • @ryaj2356
    @ryaj2356 Год назад

    Plasma cutter, $200. Grinder and cut off wheels, $30. Hammer, $2. Finding the source, time and or money to buy all that weight, unknown. Hydro press, $1000. Storage, and the time to break down all this…it would take forever to finally make any money. Dont quit your day jobs. You don’t make very much

  • @papermaker85
    @papermaker85 Год назад

    Noone has that many motors laying around

  • @frerecampbell9291
    @frerecampbell9291 Год назад +1

    I even slowed the playback speed down to minimum, but still too fast.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      Check out this video it shows that part in more detail.
      ruclips.net/video/J89yAawcWs8/видео.html

  • @DavidBarclay-zf3ky
    @DavidBarclay-zf3ky Месяц назад

    It's all labor all of your time

  • @TomSarros-bj2mq
    @TomSarros-bj2mq 3 месяца назад

    U will never pay for the shere machine scrapping.

  • @rngn2010
    @rngn2010 Год назад +1

    maybe next time you can negotiate a cheaper cost for the motors.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад +1

      Yeah I definitely overpaid a bit there but I still made money so it's all good.

  • @renanjacob6791
    @renanjacob6791 Год назад +1

    So much waste, those motors could be easily repared to sell, with great profity

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      The previous owner tried to sell them for months but no one wanted them. It's hard to sell a use electric motor just because of how specialized they have to be to fit a particular application.

    • @renanjacob6791
      @renanjacob6791 Год назад

      @@AlwaysBored123 ah yeah, I understend, there in USA its not worth, but here in Brazil, any one of those motors Will be easy to sell, the New ones are valued in dólar, so buy from a store its too expensive. Lucky country

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Год назад

      @@renanjacob6791 Yes the US is very wasteful unfortunately.

  • @cecilveley5722
    @cecilveley5722 Год назад +1

    Learn how to rebuild them cheap resale for cash strapped people

  • @wesleystephenson7396
    @wesleystephenson7396 9 месяцев назад

    .15 that is awful

  • @testme504
    @testme504 6 месяцев назад

    Fake an all CAPP

  • @Why-mc8vd
    @Why-mc8vd 9 месяцев назад

    How much you paid for the 3000lb of motors and where you bought them at recycling center?

  • @mattm.5436
    @mattm.5436 Месяц назад

    Yeah that’s great- but it’s amazing to me where I. The hell do guys like you just happen to get access to all this potential scrap. Like just happen to acquire this mass of stuff.
    Yeah maybe if you’re special somehow. Special access. Privileged connects.

    • @AlwaysBored123
      @AlwaysBored123  Месяц назад

      Electric motors aren't as common as ferrous scrap but if you keep your eyes open you'll find it. You will have to pay for copper-bearing scrap though so have cash and be ready to deal.

  • @TomSarros-bj2mq
    @TomSarros-bj2mq 3 месяца назад

    U will never pay for the shere machine scrapping.