Spot Price Charts : Small Time Blog

Spot Price Charts

by Bradley Voight on 05/30/12

We can thank Scrapmonster.com for our price charts. I have posted some common items and also some items that are not so common, but are also recyclable. Prices are what you would get at a scrap yard. 


Let me state again that Smalltime's ultimate goal is a multifaceted scrap yard accepting all of the items listed on my materials page and more. To reach that goal we need your feedback. I've said it once before, but it is worth repeating many times, Indiana is a joke at going green and until the people of Indiana wise up and see the tremendous amount of wasting that they do, then we will continue to to plow thousands of tons of useful material into landfills.

Comments (0)


Leave a comment


Disclaimer: This is not investment advice as I am neither licensed nor qualified to advise anyone's financial decisions. It is a site presenting an "out of the box" set of ideas on how to possibly maximize profit from recycling, creating an incentive for people to recycle. Smalltimerecycling.com and I Brad Voight are not responsible for any losses incurred from tips or suggestions presented on Smalltimrecycling.com, they are simply my own opinions and I encourage you to form your own opinions.
Also, the Smalltime Blog is not intended to be journalism. It is my own personal commentary on market factors, conditions, and events and other commentary relative to the content on Smalltimerecycling.com and is by no means meant to convey news or provide coverage of any news event.
Small Time Recycling's Mission Statement

Our primary mission is to reclaim valuable recyclables from the waste stream and bring attention to the wastefulness of America. Currently we are recycling metals and e-waste. The Smalltime Blog is a non political commentary on metal, stock, currency and other markets. The Smalltime Blog is also where the hard lessons of a self taught investor are discussed.
ReUseIt.com
​$1 billion+ worth of aluminum cans trashed each year in America. 
That's $19 billion thrown away this century!

Fill out the form below and describe the metal items you want removed and their location