Allright, I'll take a crack at revision for next time.
I agree that recyclers can be great to deal with - I never
thought this reflected badly on them.
Recycling is what they do and they do it in the most
efficient way they can. It's sometimes tragic to see all
that history shoved in a compactor, but that's why we
collect these things.
-------------------------------------------------
Bill Whitson bcw_at_u.washington.edu
(mail may come from alternate addresses)
Classic Computers List Operator/Owner
http://haliotis.bothell.washington.edu/classiccmp
On Wed, 10 Dec 1997, William Donzelli wrote:
> >In all seriousness - there are a large (and growing) number of so called
> >"computer and electronics 'recyclers'" who take usable computers and
> >recycle them into "reusable scrap". Small amounts of gold, silver, and
> >platinum are extracted and the remainder of the material is generally
> >just marketed to less wasteful countries.
>
> I have always had a problem with this part of the FAQ. These people are
> our friends, as they often get the real gems. They do not always get the
> big stuff - one time I saw a bunch of Tempest rated PCs, and NeXT
> equipment, all on the same pile.
>
> The precious metal content of a big mini or mainframe can be quite a lot
> (check out <www.mrsscrap.com> and you will see what I mean), so the way
> they recycle is all based on ecomomics. Obviously, the gold is stripped
> first - it is the cream. The copper is probably next on the list, obtained
> by grinding the circuit boards and wires into powder. The rest is not
> worth it, literally. It is far too labor intensive to completely strip a
> computer down to basic metals - the money made would all go into paying
> the grunts! The labor in China is very cheap (actually, the strippers are
> young men that work like dogs for 2-3 years to make thier dowry money),
> thus the frames, disks, and power supplies get shipped overseas.
>
> William Donzelli
> william_at_ans.net
>
>
Received on Wed Dec 10 1997 - 21:16:41 GMT