How Much Do You Make Stripping Copper Wire In A Day?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2022
  • Answering one of my most persistent scrap metal recycling questions; how much do you really make stripping wire for a whole day? With a variety of wire and our trusty stripmeister, we get to the bottom of this! Will we get rich with all that scrap copper? the results may surprise you!
    Wire stripper I use: amzn.to/3sirg18
    The motorized stripper: amzn.to/3y0JMuQ
    The wire cutters I like: amzn.to/2T6j3OW
    This is the cheaper version: amzn.to/2SwrYsB
    And here are those grips I recommend: amzn.to/2QCJmYl
    (If you make a purchase on amazon through the links above, a small amount of what amazon makes on the sale is shared with me. It's a great way to help support my channel, at no additional cost to you. Even if you buy something other than my tool recommendations!)
    Please like/share this video if you enjoyed it, and subscribe to thubprint!
    / @thubprint
    I love mail! You can send me some here if you like:
    Thubprint
    PO BOX 99900 RF 764 740
    RPO WESTBROOK
    CALGARY AB
    T3C 1B6
    / thubprint
    / thubprint
    Music:
    bsmith - Industrial Scrap
    Streambeats - Harris Heller

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @sixtyfiveford
    @sixtyfiveford Год назад +647

    Problem is people not being able to turn off the scraping mindset. I've watched countless guys scrap $200-1000 used and or vintage equipment(no work needed) for $30-50 in scrap with hours of labor. All because there might be copper inside....

    • @charetjc
      @charetjc Год назад +82

      I thought it a bit weird to strip a spool of wire that would likely be redrawn and insulated in another spool...

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone Год назад +61

      It's the mindset of you know what you know and not leaving comfort zone. Someone would rather yank out the $5 of copper from vintage audio gear than have to go through the effort of selling it for $20 more profit.

    • @josephgaona1996
      @josephgaona1996 Год назад +64

      We were setting lines for Verizon an came to a power box that had a crack head trying to strip the copper an as we were going to tell him chill an explosion an blue light came out of him he had a hole on his chest an you could see smoke come out of it I’m sure his lungs were behind the hole idk if he lived or what ambulance took him

    • @dankemusico5878
      @dankemusico5878 Год назад +12

      @@josephgaona1996 damn!

    • @kylep506
      @kylep506 Год назад +5

      @@josephgaona1996 mann wtf

  • @solocork1285
    @solocork1285 Год назад +486

    So I watched your channel, got hooked, bought a wire stripper and started in on my Dad's store of various wire to be stripped. He died before he got it done. Yesterday I was given $415.27 at a local scrap yard. This isn't about money for me, just something that I needed to do for my Dad. But I was amazed at what it is worth. Now I find myself doing just what my Dad did, hawk eyeing dumsters and construction site waste piles. It will become an enjoyable past time, I know. Thanks for all your work and good advice.

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +53

      Thanks for your support and for saying hi! Condolences for your loss btw. I feel compelled to piece things together in clever ways from garbage to honour the spirit of my grandpa 👍

    • @spangdeez498
      @spangdeez498 Год назад +9

      RIP to your Dad, I’m sorry for your loss… sometimes it’s not about the money- for example: look at what you did.. you cleaned up, recycled, saved some of the Earth, now that metal gets remade into something else and no need to dig that much more… AND you got paid to do it- Also it makes you think about your Father .. which in my book is never a bad thing! We all love our Dads.. but as Thub always says- you left it better than you found it!

    • @spangdeez498
      @spangdeez498 Год назад +4

      @@thubprint hey Thub, my grandpa also got me into recycling when I was about 10 y/o - I’ll be 36 in December and I’ve been doing it ever since .. he died in 2021 and used to give me all kinds of scrap, but it’s something I’ll do Forever now

    • @TiborRoussou
      @TiborRoussou Год назад +1

      You may find scrapping therapeutic. I enjoy deciding what it is I want to do, and doing it.

    • @sharkscrapper
      @sharkscrapper Год назад +2

      Condolences for your loss solo cork. Scrapping is a wonderful hobby and I'm sure your Dad would love that you're getting into it.

  • @gazs7237
    @gazs7237 Год назад +758

    I'm a plumber working for a building company. I'm a diligent scrap collector and no one else on the firm can be bothered. I obviously get a fair amount of copper pipe, but I also get a LOT of cable. I've never spent a whole day stripping it, but I do put in an hour or 2 when I can. I don't actually see it as "work" I'm at home listening to radio and chilling in my shed with a stripper 😂
    I have to say though I never strip the Flex cable (stranded stuff) it's a pain in the arse... Even though in the UK we get the same price for both, It's just under "bright copper cable". Also it's £6.20 a kilo here right now and Im gonna turn in my stash soon for Xmas presents for the kids 😉

    • @ib8628
      @ib8628 Год назад +156

      i love chilling with strippers too

    • @henryk1031
      @henryk1031 Год назад +6

      Strips all the same in stripper like thub has.

    • @draconusspiritus1037
      @draconusspiritus1037 Год назад +9

      8 years self employed in home improvement. Focusing mostly on new and replacement doors, windows, carports and patio covers. I never collected much scrap copper as I tried to avoid doing much plumbing and electrical. But I collected a LOT of aluminum and did much as you describe. Pile it up and now and then sit out in the yard with the few hand tools needed to clean it up. 2 piles, one for dirty, the other for clean. Then any time I felt the need or want for a few extra bucks in my pocket haul an armful or two off to the scrap yard.

    • @gazs7237
      @gazs7237 Год назад +3

      @@henryk1031 yeah looking to get a better stripper at some point... But what ever it costs I have to make the money back in scrap... And the flex just doesn't seem worth it. When this one breaks I'll replace it with a better one.

    • @gazs7237
      @gazs7237 Год назад +3

      @@draconusspiritus1037 I've dabbled in aluminium collection too... It's just so light and bulky, takes up way too much room. I do save the cast aluminium boiler burners though... They pack a punch on the scrappy scales

  • @drcyb3r
    @drcyb3r Год назад +166

    I'm not a recycling person, but I often repair electronics. If something is too old or broken, I take usable stuff out. I also have a box where I collect raw copper stuff like solid copper heat sinks. It's not much but if I would throw it away, I wouldn't get anything for it and so I might get something when I find someone to sell it to.

    • @drcyb3r
      @drcyb3r Год назад +3

      @@Nighterlev A lot of old servers also have big and heavy heatsinks made from copper. And they often have 2-4 of them inside.

    • @Greebli
      @Greebli Год назад +2

      "i'm not a recycling person" lmao

    • @drcyb3r
      @drcyb3r Год назад +2

      @@Greebli Sorry, I don't know the correct word for a person that does recycling for a living.

    • @DevinJuularValentine
      @DevinJuularValentine Год назад +1

      ​@@drcyb3r from the video he used the word "scrapper" which sounds right to me, never heard it before but definitely given me some ideas how to make a little money

    • @wallyskeet
      @wallyskeet Год назад +1

      @@Nighterlev e waste Ben on yt 😊

  • @vovve123
    @vovve123 Год назад +282

    Small tip: If it is hard to get hold of the insulation after the cut, have a hammer ready, smack the end of the wire and it is quite easy

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +75

      Oh that’s a great tip! It really can be a nuisance starting the peel sometimes

    • @ScrapFatherScrapSon
      @ScrapFatherScrapSon Год назад +7

      Why have I never thought of this

    • @jameshaines604
      @jameshaines604 Год назад +4

      Nice tip yo 👌

    • @2ndPortal
      @2ndPortal Год назад +2

      That's what they thought me in electric school. You squeeze or hammer the ends to soften the insulation and squeeze the conductor out

    • @kristopherbuchanan974
      @kristopherbuchanan974 Год назад +2

      Another tip is to not start at the end and just bend the wire around and it will pop out.

  • @scottfreedoms9584
    @scottfreedoms9584 Год назад +101

    I think the speed of the drill you use makes a huge difference. I bought a Stripmeister last month after watching your video on them. The first drill I used was a cheap menards tool shop brand one. took a awhile to get through stuff. Switched over to a stupid fast hammer drill and can race through the wires now.
    You are absolutely right about needing to have your wires sorted to similar sizes to save time.
    Enjoy your videos. Stay safe.

    • @Suzu92
      @Suzu92 Год назад +5

      Once i got all one size i was just feeding them to the stripper.

    • @RK-jc5ey
      @RK-jc5ey 4 месяца назад

      Hammer drills are for drilling through masonry make sure it’s on screw mode

  • @charfred3198
    @charfred3198 Год назад +7

    My mom does this without the copper wire and gets $300 in $1 bills

  • @andrewcannon587
    @andrewcannon587 Год назад +32

    not just labor time, wear and tear cost on the drill, and stripper blade does cost something. Love thub economic analysis.

  • @MrTheHillfolk
    @MrTheHillfolk Год назад +25

    I work at a motor rewind shop ,and occasionally someone stops by asking if we have any scrap motors.
    Sure ,go for it buddy.
    What I'll say is none of them have ever come back for more a second time.
    It's almost not worth it for us to strip them and use the burnout oven unless we can get one of the kids on a huge pile for a few days.
    Even then,it's basically clearing space and gets us a few free pizzas for lunch.

    • @GonzoDonzo
      @GonzoDonzo 11 месяцев назад

      I used to do HVAC work and id scrap out all the old units i had replaced that year. Only once did i try to strip the copper from the compressor motors. What a nightmare that was.

  • @blangstaff09
    @blangstaff09 Год назад +21

    Love the channel Thub. From my experience it isn't worth it for me to strip anything smaller than 14 gauge, I figured it out the same way you did. I usually won't even bother taking the time to strip the outer casing off of 14 gauge romex, my scrap yard doesn't differentiate between 12/14 gauge romex for prices. I also have the motorized version of your stripper, I sprung for it because I'm an electrician and I come across a lot of wire. I think it is a lot easier to crank out higher volumes when you can go hands free on the automation and not have to worry about pulling the trigger. I've also found that if you split the task of running your pile through the machine and then pulling the insulation off it helps to speed up production. I also don't do it all at once, more often than not I'll do one bucket in the garage for a little bit after the kids go to sleep. I just fill up buckets with bare bright until I get tired of it sitting around and then go cash in. 🤑

    • @abeldominguez1234
      @abeldominguez1234 Год назад

      Yup just by helping pull some of the installation off really gets the job done better I Kno what your saying Ive worked in recycling yards for years

  • @careyautorepairs
    @careyautorepairs Год назад

    Love how you try to save a customer money it’s such a great thing. Fitters don’t have to do it cheap we don’t want that, but saving them is the way in the service industry.
    The IRR of saving a customer money is a win and the environment wins.
    They save bucks, you feel good inside, you get more work so more money later, and the environment feels better for less landfill for garbage. Your videos are amazing I love watching all of them.

  • @FiZiKaLReFLeX
    @FiZiKaLReFLeX Год назад +1

    Subscribed. Look forward to watching your videos. You’re fun to watch. Keep it up bud!

  • @matthewgartner5339
    @matthewgartner5339 Год назад +3

    A quick foot pedal switch for your drill is a surge protector on the floor. It let's you go both hands for feeding and separating the wire as it goes through.

  • @patprop74
    @patprop74 Год назад +26

    about 3 years ago in a warehouse clear out, I picked up a 4-foot by 4-foot by 3 feet high cardboard bin full of mixed wire to be stripped, with a proper wire stripper that has its own proper AC motor, my father and I managed to strip the box in 3 or 4 days and we barely made enough to pay for the wire stripper which at the time I paid around 250$ let alone our time of stripping wires, The only real way to make money stripping, is in a Topless bar haha

    • @RxTerps
      @RxTerps 9 месяцев назад

      For 100lbs of copper you get $300-$400
      That is amazing. The hell you people talking about

    • @ARoyalLyon
      @ARoyalLyon Месяц назад

      @@RxTerpsPretty sure he's talking about pulling down your underwire bra for 3 minutes and getting $300-$400.

  • @Oneshot8242
    @Oneshot8242 4 месяца назад +2

    After reading a LOT of the comments here, I feel that some folks are missing a good opportunity.
    I cast the copper myself, it's easy, and you don't need expensive equipment. It's a lot of fun making stuff like ornaments, specialty hammers, weights, etc. Or machining it. Beats having to buy it. Even casting it into tidy, shiny little (or huge) ingots is very satisfying.
    Greetings from Denmark!

  • @geedon1
    @geedon1 Год назад

    Fascinating and worthy of a subscription if ever there were! A friend of a friend used to do this. One bought a fancy £2K machine to do this and I always wondered if it was worth it. The other guy just burned it off at night, which is totally illegal and terrible for the climate. The tiny value puts both into perspective and knowing that people will pull live wires for this kind of return really makes you think. Thank you!

  • @tinathompson2877
    @tinathompson2877 Год назад +7

    I'm in Ohio, and it's getting really cold here, I believe one day this coming week, it's only going to be a high of 49. I love the colors of fall, but don't like the really cold weather. I can handle about 60-65, with minimal wind, but anything lower than that, I'd rather just hibernate lol. Loving the videos

  • @JOEY22445
    @JOEY22445 Год назад +8

    I recently bought a wire stripper after watching your review on them. What stood out to me was what you said the main problem you had and what many others had was that sometimes the wire would move out of place causing it not to cut.
    So I was looking at different types and found one from the brand Coppermine. What they had in there demo video was that it has wire clamps on the side of the blade so it stays in place.
    I got the 302 model for $199.99 U.S because it has a separate blade that will strip big guage and romax. I'm quite happy with it.
    It also has the option to hand crank or drill attachment.
    Just wanted to say thank you for all your reviews and sharing your experience. I don't think I would know what I know if not for your videos. :)

    • @DavidGS66
      @DavidGS66 Год назад

      Yes, with my Golden Wire Stripper, cutting wheel had enough play that wire often slipped off. Seemed great in pics until you use it for a few hrs. Looking at your Coppermine stripper, problem is it takes 4 adjustments/wire. 1 adjustment/wire is ideal.

    • @JOEY22445
      @JOEY22445 Год назад

      @@DavidGS66 While I agree with you completely. Separating the wire like thub does help with that.
      Anything that saves time definitely helps.

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +2

      Nice, and thank you! There are a number of different devices on the market, but I’m glad my comparison helped identify a few pain points you could use to make an educated purchase decision 👍

  • @braeden1996
    @braeden1996 Год назад

    Quality content, you’ve got a knack for RUclips, keep at it! Subscribed to see you grow 👍🏼

  • @asbestomolesto
    @asbestomolesto Год назад

    This is an amazing and enlighting video, thank you. The value of our time is almost always underestimated! Thank you :)

  • @milk2331
    @milk2331 Год назад +17

    whenever you have long lengths of wire or spools, try to sell it as wire first, it’s worth WAY more as wire, instead of scrap copper

  • @sharkscrapper
    @sharkscrapper Год назад +6

    I'm thinking about investing in one of the motorized Stripmeisters. They're awesome machines and much better the el-cheapo I'm currently using. There's a lot to be said for understanding the ROI relative to one's time. Time is always in short supply for me, so I only strip heavy gauge wire. But it is so dependent on why folks do this and how much wire they get. Take care and keep up the great work.

  • @John-eq8cu
    @John-eq8cu Год назад

    I collected wires over the years, along with brass, and took it to the junkyard, and I got enough to make it worthwhile going down there once every few years. As I recall, they paid different rates for different types of wires -- but I never thought about stripping the wire and selling it as pure copper. In fact, I never saw one of those drill-strippers before, and that makes it seem worth the effort, at least for the larger-gauge wires, as you found out.

  • @bobklee2397
    @bobklee2397 Месяц назад

    Very interesting- thanks for taking the time to do this

  • @patricepaiement470
    @patricepaiement470 Год назад +10

    The second hole from the top is made for stripping loomex, you can use it and adjust the blade to skin both the white insulation and one of the wire in one go. To untwist you can just tie the end to something solid and use your drill to untwist

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +5

      I didn’t realize the Lumex gap would split one of the inner ones open at the same time, that completely changes it 😅

  • @thesweetone
    @thesweetone Год назад +38

    I did 4 hours of stripping of 250mcm copper from a job I did way up north, all cut offs. And it got me $400 like 8 years ago... Really depends on the overall amount, type and gauge

    • @TiborRoussou
      @TiborRoussou Год назад +15

      ...and prices of copper when selling it.

    • @codetech5598
      @codetech5598 Год назад +2

      What would you have gotten if you sold the scrap wire with insulation still on it?

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +4

      No. The stripping didn’t get you that much. The copper got you that much. How much did you actually make for those 4 hours spent, rather than the total amount in the end

    • @Heremy
      @Heremy Год назад

      The meth is pretty good here in the northwest so money making is not the end goal

  • @TheUltimateRecycler
    @TheUltimateRecycler Год назад

    Well done Thub, that's an excellent analysis! 👍👍

  • @strakill
    @strakill 2 месяца назад

    I'm coming back to this video a year later. I just ordered a Vevor 60w 7 hole electric stripper. I had the multi purpose ran by a drill like you had in this video and I got rid of that thing quickly. Most of my stuff is 14 - 12 gauge Romex. The wire always slipped off the multi purpose stripper for me so I junked it. This motorized one from Vevor apparently eliminates that issue so we will see when it arrives. The other reason I bought it for is the massive amounts of extension cords I get. If I strip the outer insulation off the price goes up $1.00 a pound. So I spent $200 US to see if I can make better profit on the 2 materials. I'll come back and edit this post with the results. Keep it up Thub!

  • @altxyz
    @altxyz Год назад +4

    Just for comparison: in eastern europe, as a chemist (with a masters degree), my salary (after taxes) is about 4.5$/hour. Stripping copper cables isnt that bad. :)

  • @biggreenblob
    @biggreenblob Год назад +12

    I have always loved scrapping, but I realized early on that stripping most kinds of wire was not really worth the small amount of extra money as compared to selling with the insulation still on.
    I make exceptions for solid 10 or 12 gauge, especially if it's nice and straight. Kinked up stuff gets tossed in the #1 insulated pile. I also encounter a good deal of 8, 6, and even 4 gauge, all of which obviously gets stripped. One time I got three 20 foot sections of 500 KCMil from a decommissioned back up generator. That was a good day.

    • @joshbarr118
      @joshbarr118 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, as a hobby sure, but it's not worth the effort or pay someone.

    • @biggreenblob
      @biggreenblob 11 месяцев назад

      @@joshbarr118 for the super big stuff (like 8 gauge and up) it is DEFINITELY worth it. Easy and quick to strip and comes with big returns.

  • @fermitupoupon1754
    @fermitupoupon1754 Год назад +9

    For me it's always been about how much the cladding weighs in comparison to the cable itself. Because the local scrapyard assumes that cables are only 30% copper by weight. So it's just a matter of figuring out which cables have less than 30% copper by weight, those are not worth stripping. The ones that have more copper are worth it.
    Also depending on what kind of insulation is being used, it's worth keeping the different kinds of plastic sorted together. As over here we do have a company that buys sorted plastics in order to make new plastics out of them. And even if that gets you maybe cents per kilo for the plastic, the municipal dump charges 18ct/m^3 to take it away for you. So it's much more economical to sell the plastic as well.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад

      Lol you get charged to have garbage removed, per pound?

    • @fermitupoupon1754
      @fermitupoupon1754 Год назад +1

      @@jamesbizs yep, if it's non-recyclable you have to pay for it to be removed.
      If you pollute, you pay, at least that's the idea.
      Mind you my city does not charge for garbage removal through city taxes. So you have the option of making sure things can be recycled, at which point getting rid of them is entirely free.
      For non-recyclables, there is the normal pickup service like in any city. The difference being that you pay 1.50 euro per 60 litre garbage bag.

  • @VondaInWonderland
    @VondaInWonderland 11 месяцев назад +7

    I'm the kind of smart that can see the gauge, but not the kind that knew that those amazing strippers exist 😮 you can't imagine how long it takes me. I make jewelry out of my copper and don't find things to take apart very often, but dang, I might just start looking around more ❤

  • @cw7023
    @cw7023 Год назад +22

    Just a FYI the old cloth/fabric insulation has a very good chance of being made with asbestos, so do take the precaution of using a respirator.

    • @rhamlet5290
      @rhamlet5290 11 месяцев назад

      If it has asbestos, you should have a full body suit and certification. Don't touch that shit

    • @ARoyalLyon
      @ARoyalLyon Месяц назад

      Not to mention never breathing inside that space again, throwing away your clothes as you exit through a shower, and declaring the property a Superfund site! Asbestos is safe until you disturb it in a way that breaks it up into airborne particles.

  • @biglungsprod5617
    @biglungsprod5617 Год назад +3

    Im a stripper from Estonia. All my stripping equippment is handmade, box cutters, wood, screws...
    I work daily but stripping is my hobby and i enjoy it.
    I like your videos been watching you long time.

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад

      Well thanks for saying hi! There’s no shortage of possible solutions for stripping wire that’s for sure. My personal favourite I’ve seen was a pair of rollers powered by a motor that didn’t even cut the insulation, they’d just crush it enough that the copper bursts out. Certainly larger than a vice mounted unit though lol

    • @gasstationpeanuts1814
      @gasstationpeanuts1814 Год назад +2

      Greetings! I have put several Estonian strippers through university. Never needed a box cutter, though.
      All kidding aside, I used the sharpened screw and wood block method for years and it works very well.

    • @biglungsprod5617
      @biglungsprod5617 Год назад +1

      @@gasstationpeanuts1814 lol a stripper from Estonia yea i got it xD. The wood block and screw method is good yes. Have a good day!

  • @solidmoon8266
    @solidmoon8266 11 месяцев назад +10

    Soaking the wire in boiling water for a few minutes really speeds up the job as the plastic gets really soft, making stripping a lot easier to slice.

  • @eugenes9751
    @eugenes9751 Год назад +30

    Keep in mind that that's only that hourly rate if you have unlimited free copper rolling in. It takes exponentially more hours to extract the copper than to strip it.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +3

      Ugh. No? That’s the hourly rate for the extra he made BY stripping the wires. If he didn’t strip them, he’d make x amount. Spending the time, he makes amount. The difference, is the hourly rate he’s making.

    • @eugenes9751
      @eugenes9751 Год назад +15

      @@jamesbizs please improve your reading comprehension. That's exactly what I said.

    • @sciencesold_
      @sciencesold_ Год назад +2

      @@jamesbizs It's still dependent on having a supply of copper wire

  • @weekendstuff
    @weekendstuff Год назад

    Nice video and sum up. A whole lot of work you did there.

  • @FroFTW85
    @FroFTW85 Год назад +4

    I used to strip wire all the time, back when i worked in construction. It was always a nice little $150-$200 pay check, for like half a days work, once a month or so. I stopped doing it though. For 1) the price of all scrap metal had dropped so much. And for 2) the place that i took the scrap to, was known for having under weighing scales.

  • @UnicornMeat512
    @UnicornMeat512 Год назад +19

    I use to do this on the side. Saved up enough to buy a few tools and got into woodworking. Now I pay myself upwards of $100 an hour on most projects I do while putting half that back into tools and wood. Scrapping gave me a lot. The profit was horrible, the drive to improve was everything.

  • @harryzero1566
    @harryzero1566 Год назад +2

    If it has an earth or ground conductor use a box cutter to expose end then use pliers to unzip the entire length.
    Individual conductors can be unzipped passing conductor between two spaced blades clamped in a vice.
    So for those that don't have a mechanised wire stripper all you need is a box cutter and a few blades.
    If you don't have a vice, you could clamp your spaced blades in a mole wrench.

  • @robertsherburne2214
    @robertsherburne2214 Год назад +1

    Nice analysis which will definitely help me decide whether to strip or not.

  • @1784st
    @1784st Год назад +3

    I have been waiting for this

  • @Ian-xr9ff
    @Ian-xr9ff Год назад +24

    I was like wow someone who’s not a tweaker stripping copper, then he said “I took the nicest ten pounds an buried it in the back yard”

  • @KD0CAC
    @KD0CAC Год назад

    Have the same stripper , going to use motor from a treadmill , add a footswitch to drive the stripper , the treadmill & foot switch were part of my free pickups ;)

  • @prolandscapesbychrismoore4171
    @prolandscapesbychrismoore4171 Год назад +1

    Great explanation. The best part.... knowing the difference in taking the time and effort to strip the wire over just taking it in, as is. $64 in an 8 hour day. Worth it to some, not worth it to others.

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +3

      I try to keep that in mind when I’m making these types of videos, it’s not my place to tell people what is it isn’t “worth it” because I don’t know the economics of their situation. Totally up to the individual, I’m just aiming to help people make informed decisions

  • @YouCoontsSeeMe
    @YouCoontsSeeMe Год назад +7

    Beautiful bin of copper. 😁

  • @EatScrabbleGoo
    @EatScrabbleGoo Год назад +3

    albanians are analyzing the hell out of this video rn

  • @agentorange3774
    @agentorange3774 Год назад

    Took an old treadmill and used the motor, control board and rollers to make a wire stripper. Gets the job done super fast but there’s a lot of cleanup during the process.

  • @llamacebu216
    @llamacebu216 Год назад +2

    12AWG wire is around 4 o'clock on the top dial. 14AWG wire is around 10 o'clock.
    I made the mistake thinking the spinning blade should be lined up with the wheels. Read the instructions and found out the blade needs to be higher since the wheels force the wire up
    This machine has absolutely ZERO problem stripping small wire. /

  • @HappyHarryHardon
    @HappyHarryHardon Год назад +8

    A hardware store near me had 2” x 10ft copper pipe priced at 18.00. It was miss marked. It should have been 2” x 1.0ft. They had to honor the price. They were mad, until I said “I could have kept my mouth shut and bought all of it, then went to the others in the area and bought all theirs. They were okay after that. Their price tags come from corporate so all the stores got the same wrong tags.

    • @jong2359
      @jong2359 11 месяцев назад

      Just to be clear for all the old people salivating, the store didnt HAVE to honor the price tag, it was their choice/policy. This is not an unalienable right.

  • @MegaDirtyberty
    @MegaDirtyberty Год назад +7

    I bought at an auction a pile of welding leads for very cheap, I sold quite a lot of the good ones and set to stripping the bad ones. There is a lot of brass and copper in those, I was amazed at the prices I got, I basically tripled the money I spent to buy the leads in the first place.

    • @JM-iz3fr
      @JM-iz3fr Год назад +4

      How much time did you spend and with your investment how much did you make an hour??

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +1

      You tripled how much you made, due to putting your own time into it.

    • @MegaDirtyberty
      @MegaDirtyberty Год назад +1

      @@JM-iz3fr I more than broke even scrapping the broken leads but I more than broke even with selling the good leads, from memory the leads cost something like 50, I got back something like 400 all up. As for the hours, I have no idea as I didn't record them, just selling one lead paid for all of them so the rest was gravy.

    • @MegaDirtyberty
      @MegaDirtyberty Год назад

      @@CovidConQuitTheCensorship What I sold the good leads for more than paid off the original investment, anything else I got from stripping out the bad leads was gravy.

    • @MegaDirtyberty
      @MegaDirtyberty Год назад

      @@CovidConQuitTheCensorship Time is relative ;)

  • @joelogan6448
    @joelogan6448 Год назад

    I started watching your videos, now I’m hooked. I’ve been binge watching your videos when I get home at night and I enjoy them so much that after learning you make more money on RUclips when people watch the entire ad, I now watch every ad to the end

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад

      Thanks so much! I have a lot of fun making them so I’m glad you’ve been enjoying them. I wouldn’t worry too much about letting the whole ad play through, it’s just fractions of pennies for individual plays. The fact that you’re watching and enjoying them is why makes all the difference! If you have any questions or suggestions on how I could improve please let me know. All the best!

    • @joelogan6448
      @joelogan6448 Год назад

      Every time I think I have a suggestion I find you have already done a video on it lol

  • @GTObrad1
    @GTObrad1 Год назад

    Hey, great video. Thanks for doing that. Im an electrician and have a nice little stash going and always wondered if it was worth it to strip it or not. I at least have an idea now if I want to spend the time or not

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Год назад +3

    That’s exactly what I wanted to know, is it worth it to strip it or not? Awesome! Thanks for the videos, cheers! Of course you never factored in the amount of time it took to scavenge all this copper either

    • @rimothytooltarski4459
      @rimothytooltarski4459 Год назад

      I believe he said it was mostly accumulated from his workshop and around the house etc.

  • @rollinhrd80
    @rollinhrd80 Год назад +7

    Would the dollar per hour average increase if you kept separate bins to avoid having to sort bins of tangled wire when you have accumulated enough to strip and scrap? Just a thought. Really enjoy the videos thanks for all the hard work.

    • @6980869
      @6980869 Год назад

      Fairly good idea, if one has the room

  • @skboychannel6057
    @skboychannel6057 Год назад

    Thank you a lot I have let go a lot but I can grab them for now what is the name of the matching you are using

  • @DriverDude100
    @DriverDude100 Год назад +2

    This is a good video, and it reinforces what I suspected. In most cases, it is not worth stripping wire. Just take your insulated wire to the recycling center, so you can spend your time doing more valuable work.

  • @thatcanada
    @thatcanada Год назад +4

    Your stripmeister will cut that romex and one of the inside wires at the same time, thus saving an entire step.
    I was doing it your way too until I stumbled across one of their videos. And I put a motor I found on my stripmeister (same as yours) and it simplifies things as you get your 2nd hand back not having to work the drill.

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад +1

      Oh the motor adaptation would be really clever. And I hadn’t thought the oblong romex hole would cut into one of the inner insulated wires, that makes way more sense!

    • @aaronboychuk1446
      @aaronboychuk1446 Год назад +1

      Yes, if you get it set right it will save so much time!

  • @kwatee
    @kwatee Год назад +3

    Does the extra twist on the wire after stripping really improve the storage efficiency? I think you could get away with just a loose coil in a trash can and save some time.

    • @chrisvaughn4399
      @chrisvaughn4399 Год назад

      I have 3 different diameter plastic spools (with one tabletop edge missing) that I use to condense everything. The larger the guage, the larger the spool used. Smaller wire bends more easily.
      Then just slide it all into a 5 gallon bucket to form different rings of material. My 5 gallon buckets typically weigh around 50-60 pounds with room left over for copper pipe scraps or unprocessed #2 wire on top.
      Keeping a small footprint leaves more room for everything else (of lesser value). Crush the cans!
      For me, this helps to minimize trips to the scrap yard.
      The irony of scrapping is that getting paid for the effort takes away from the opportunity to find more treasure!
      Time is money.

  • @its_marc
    @its_marc Год назад

    Good video mate, points made well as usual 👍

  • @drmodestoesq
    @drmodestoesq Год назад +1

    You could put the Stripmeister (tm) sideways in a drill press. I'd put the pulleys on the slowest speed to increase torque.

  • @saadrazzaq1946
    @saadrazzaq1946 Год назад +5

    My friend has scrap in Silverado way SW in the back side it is a washer

  • @haonydue6755
    @haonydue6755 Год назад +5

    Mr Bernard is legit and his method works like magic I keep on earning every single week with his new strategy

    • @martinsben6454
      @martinsben6454 Год назад

      Wow I' m just shock someone mentioned expert Mr Bernard I thought I'm the only one trading with him 😊

    • @martinsben6454
      @martinsben6454 Год назад

      he changed me recover all l lost trying to trade myself

    • @zayyanusahabi5369
      @zayyanusahabi5369 Год назад

      My first investment with Mr Bernard gave me profit of over twenty thousand us dollars and ever since then he has never failed to deliver and I can even say he's the most sincere broker I have know

    • @zayyanusahabi5369
      @zayyanusahabi5369 Год назад

      I think he's the best broker I ever seen

    • @coxolive6070
      @coxolive6070 Год назад

      I think I'm blessed because if not I wouldn't have met someone who is as spectacular as expert Mr Bernard

  • @Zappy1210
    @Zappy1210 3 месяца назад +1

    I get literally tons (approx.10-12 tons) of 4/0 to 500 mcm per year from my job as an electrician in the mining industry. In my barn I currently have about 5 tons waiting to be prepared to run through my Vervor electric wire stripper. 98% of the wire I get is Teck 90 cable (copper insulated conductors covered by rubber jacket inside aluminum MC type covering and wrapped in another rubber coating) so I generally have to cut the outer layers off with a grinder cutoff wheel. I usually prepare wire for a month for the stripper then strip wire for a month a few hours a day on the weekends.
    February is a "stripping" month for me. I generally work about 3 hours a day on the weekend days and usually do about 500 lbs bright bare a day in those 3 hours which is about what my 30 gallon barrels hold. I have 35 or so barrels of bright bare full ATM as I only take 4-6 barrels a month to sell at a few different scrap yards so I don't get caught up in a 1099 situation. I also save and sell the aluminum and make about $100 or so a month off that. Bottom line is I average about 60k a year extra money from scrap copper and another $1200-ish from aluminum, plus the bright bare I do not sell that slowly adds up each year. Every year I end up with 5-8 more surplus barrels full (part of my retirement plan lol)
    A recommendation to you if all you do is the smaller stuff. Look into copper granulators. I bought one several years ago it was about $4,000 new. It made quick easy work of of trash cans full of random wire from data cable to #6 - 4 conductor cable like dryer cords etc. I could do about 40 lbs an hour and store it in 5 gallon buckets, about 200 lbs each. Just toss in everything, no stripping, no prep at all. AND if you can find a company that uses granulated copper you can get about 20% more in price than bare bright. I used to sell mine to a bearing company 2-3 times a year since it was a long drive. I made about 12k-15k a year doing it. I sold my granulator about 8 years ago when I took my current job where I don't actually see much smaller wiring anymore. I also know a guy who uses a Ryobi 3000 watt 240 volt impact shredder to do the smaller stuff. He says it takes 3-4 passes of the wire, but separates the copper from the insulation with water in the catch bin.

  • @MikeySmithJones
    @MikeySmithJones Месяц назад

    That is why I pull the wires through a device I made with a screw. Takes only a little longer than the drill, but with proper form can be an excellent back and/or triceps exercise. Can isolate either back or tricep, or do a more full range of motion exercise that hits both. Scrapping for me is about having a nice hobby that develops skills with tools, helps me understand how things work, improves my fine motor skills, and is environmentally friendly.

  • @lesleycorbitt3981
    @lesleycorbitt3981 Год назад +1

    I don't usually mess with or strip anything smaller than #6 sometimes #8 but I usually just let the guys have it. Only because I don't have time to work on stripping it. When I think about what my time is worth. I have ninth grade education but I also have a masters license in electrical. I make $41.60hr or $.69 a min. But when I work overtime it's $62.40hr or $1.04 a min but on Sunday and holidays it's $83.20hr or $1.38 a min. So unless I can make something close to that which you can very easily when you have some 500 or 600kcmil It doesn't usually make sense plus It makes me feel good knowing I've helped my guys out as a little extra appreciation.

  • @dutchvanderlein6498
    @dutchvanderlein6498 18 дней назад

    Bro that is sweet how it works !

  • @TheCod3r
    @TheCod3r Год назад

    It's much quicker if you sort through your cable as you collect it. I'd recommend only stripping thicker cable. Most wore such as that used in lighting and sockets isn't worth stripping

  • @ruthbutler7984
    @ruthbutler7984 Год назад +1

    Interesting Thanks for sharing!

  • @barbarella191able
    @barbarella191able Год назад

    love you videos ! Do you recommend a wire stripper? I just purchased a pair of wire strippers , im not sure of its actually name. not pliers . but like pliers

  • @TimeSurfer206
    @TimeSurfer206 Год назад +2

    Depends on the wire. Am I stripping 22 gauge phone wires, or 500 MCM Power Cable?
    I'm a retired Electrician, and my experience is, it isn't worth stripping unless it's like 8 gauge or better.

  • @chrisvaughn4399
    @chrisvaughn4399 Год назад

    Being a part-timer in the realm of scrapping, I haven't invested in a stripping machine yet. Still using my own easily adjustable contraption that has a top and bottom blade and pulls wire through somewhat quickly with a hand crank winch attached to vice grips holding a small rolled section of stripped copper tip (then utility knife or bend and yank to pop the last bit of wire from the casing)
    However, the tip I would throw in here that saves me a lot of time is to set things up so that the wiring is pulled through an appropriately sized funnel. I have a couple that I use for oil changes on different vehicles. Straightens out all the kinks and bends, saving me the annoyance of time-consuming hassles.
    I will always take the time to transform anything to bare bright, but.. making the effort to upgrade #2 to #1? No thanks. Not even on a rainy day.
    I personally don't have nearly as much time for the thrill of the hunt as I would like.. certainly not going to waste time like that knowing my hours of labor would only be worth a few bucks. Can make so much more in the same amount of time scavenging random sidewalk iron shred or discarded appliances. Bonus -- more copper wire.. more aluminum.. more brass!
    But, I certainly do understand how many people enjoy tinkering in their sheds and garages.. That $60 difference is a free tank of gas! Hard to say no to that!

  • @joshoconnor9666
    @joshoconnor9666 11 месяцев назад

    I just built myself a large metal contraption that on the inside resembles the winding maze like shape of a portted sub woofer box with a series of filters starting with metal filters toward the front, than carbon, then fiber and composite filters, than paper followed by one last carbon filter and a large metal industrial fan pulling the air outward and i just burn it all. Takes half hour and you cant even smell a thing at the end and virtually zero smoke blows out and the smoke that does come out is white and doesnt stink. Granted u have to swap pretty.much all the filters out eventually or ar minimum clean them well but i do mine 1 time a year and its good. Ive been thinking about adding a section with electrically charged metal plates the smoke travels through. Thoughts?

  • @selenerucobo2251
    @selenerucobo2251 10 месяцев назад

    I appreciate your videos very much, thank you.

  • @bachaddict
    @bachaddict Год назад

    It might be fun to rig up two contra-rotating spools for separating long wires and their insulation!

  • @VirtualShelling411
    @VirtualShelling411 Год назад

    I’m always picking up scrap on the side of the roads to and from my work and scanning the nearest neighborhoods for metals for several reasons
    1. It holds value better then currency and your metal can be stored like a squirrel does nuts for that rainy day or when the price of that particular metal skyrockets🚀
    2.those items you pick up often are useful around the house or can be made into other things if your handy
    3. Is more of a tip ,you may have the option to sell your road side scrap to other people or places then the cheaper local scrap yards , there are people willing to pay more for your copper wire then scrap yards , some times twice as much direct to DYI smelters crafters ect. Scrap yards are middle men and they often double or triple there money , the only metal I take to them are the junk steel .

  • @johncoppinger2241
    @johncoppinger2241 Год назад

    Do you need to be proximal to a primary metropolitan area to find things to scrap like this, or is it relatively possible in smaller areas? (Big metro being like Seattle, LA, San-fran vs secondary areas or more suburb areas) I can PM you my location if that might help you gauge the answer to my question.

  • @Carpenter_King86
    @Carpenter_King86 Год назад

    Small Tip:When I strip my Romex, I bin the 1 free copper wire, then I take the REMAINING strands and QUICKLY LOOP them and TWIST 1 wire at the end of the loop to keep them together. Do all the romex. Then When it comes down to the insulated wire, I have a bin of those bundles, and work them. I've found that this saves A LOT of time ajusting the stripmister to diffrent gauges.

  • @DavidGS66
    @DavidGS66 5 месяцев назад

    You need fewer adjustments, especially for house wire, which you find a lot of. Suggestion: get a machine shop to make you a custom vice/hand tool with a series of holes (and blade in each hole) very close to size of house wire, so you can keep perfect adjustments longer or forever. It would be similar to TNT Tooling WSA hand wire stripper.

  • @bestest7239
    @bestest7239 Год назад +1

    very cool video, lookin amazing

  • @30anvz28
    @30anvz28 Год назад +1

    If you ultimately know you’re going to sort it by type… do it as you save/collect it. It saves that whole block of time later.

  • @lucasdog1
    @lucasdog1 Год назад

    Where I'm at, ANY gauge bright bare is called #1.
    Any un-tinned insulated, 14Ga. and up, is @1 insulated, whether it's stranded or not.
    Any insulated smaller than 14Ga and any tinned is #2.

  • @theholidayboy543
    @theholidayboy543 4 месяца назад

    I have a motorized stripper and it definitely saves time, plus it will strip almost any size. I’ve stripped stuff the size of a sewing needle just for fun.

  • @hul8376
    @hul8376 Год назад

    Nice! good work!

  • @miker5445
    @miker5445 Год назад

    This is why I strip very little of my wire. Romex do the first layer strip only like u said and that's it

  • @AwoudeX
    @AwoudeX Год назад

    did you add the time it took to drive it to the scrapyard and the petrol it costed to cover that distance twice? Did you add the time it took to collect and store it till you had this nice pile?

  • @petersack5074
    @petersack5074 Год назад

    Good man !. About 1 1/2 years ago, i took 160 pounds, of pure red #1 copper to recycle place. Price was 4.00 $ canadian a pound. The wire was in large 2 and 3 inch cables; extra large heavy duty stuff. Invested an afternoon, stripping this with angle grinder, with very thin stone. Extremely hard work, as the pieces were from 4 - 6 feet long, heavily insulated for underground cabling. Earned 640 $ canadian. IT IS WORTH it.......

  • @OthmanAlikhan
    @OthmanAlikhan Год назад

    Thanks for the video =)

  • @joshmallon
    @joshmallon Год назад +2

    Could make a 5 gallon bucket of 3 gallons vinegar and 1/4 - 1/2 cup of salt, soak the corroded copper for a while. Nice and shiny copper.

  • @andyboger8566
    @andyboger8566 Год назад

    @thubprint not sure if you know this but the stripmeister has that function to strip the romex right aways as well as a conductor. Don’t need to waste your time stripping the outer insulation

  • @cindyhopkins3989
    @cindyhopkins3989 Год назад

    Good video !! Smart ideas

  • @gregorygene9003
    @gregorygene9003 Год назад +1

    $67 equates to 3,925.00 Philippine pesos. Minimum daily wage here in Metro Manila is P500.00 so your one day of stripping is almost 8 days of work for a minimum wage earner.

  • @williammeeks1283
    @williammeeks1283 Год назад

    Awesome video as usual. I appreciate the breakdown ot really helps 🙂

    • @thubprint
      @thubprint  Год назад

      It’s fun to do! And always interesting to me to realize what parts are actually good value and what are not

  • @janemccaig8028
    @janemccaig8028 Год назад

    Do you have a media platform that you sell your items… like the computer boards? Love your videos!!

  • @wozzajayscrapping9056
    @wozzajayscrapping9056 Год назад +2

    Interesting video. The more you strip the more you learn what is worth it, and what is not. Eventually it becomes second nature and very little thought processes is required.👍♻️✌

  • @karolgolacik4943
    @karolgolacik4943 Год назад +1

    Stripping copper in developed country: U get nohing, you loose
    Stripping copper in underdeveloped country: Wealth and prosperity be upon you

  • @chases3314
    @chases3314 Год назад +1

    My buddy built a stripper out of 2 dollar store can openers its by hand but faster then then it slices the casing in half so as he's pulling it thru the casing spilts off to each side leaving a bare wire and he pulls it thru with a crank style mech bad ass for what it is

  • @Bizzaro500
    @Bizzaro500 Год назад +1

    You should color code your adjustment screw for the different gauge wires, less adjustment time.

  • @wb5mgr
    @wb5mgr Год назад

    So by far the best way to get the most from scrap if you have a motorized stripper is to strip it as you get it each day when you get home.
    The few min it would take to strip a 5 gal bucket of wire is better to not let it pile up.
    But better than that it is just to re-use it.
    I save and re-use nearly every scrap of wire I have from a job if its longer than my arm. I work on lots of panels where components have to be bridged,etc so having extra wire is always useful.

  • @silkroad1201
    @silkroad1201 Год назад

    I see scrapping as more of a hobby or even a side hustle. Only scrap yards can make a living doing it, but if you're scrapping instead of watching TV all day, it's worth your time (like you said)